No Email Address
Sent September 26, 2007
An
unemployed man is desperate to support his family of a wife and three kids. He
applies for a janitor's job at a large firm and easily passes an aptitude test.
The human resources
manager tells him, "You will be hired at minimum wage of $5.35 an hour. Let me
have your e-mail address so that we can get you in the loop. Our system will
automatically e-mail you all the forms and advise you when to start and where to
report on your first day."
Taken back, the man
protests that he is poor and has neither a computer nor an e-mail address.
To this the manager
replies, "You must understand that to a company like ours that means that you
virtually do not exist. Without an e-mail address you can hardly expect to be
employed by a high-tech firm. Good day."
Stunned, the man leaves.
Not knowing where to turn and having $10 in his wallet, he walks past a farmers'
market and sees a stand selling 25 lb. crates of beautiful red tomatoes. He buys
a crate, carries it to a busy corner and displays the tomatoes. In less than 2
hours he sells all the tomatoes and makes 100% profit.
Repeating the process
several times more that day, he ends up with almost $100 and arrives home that
night with several bags of groceries for his family.
During the night he
decides to repeat the tomato business the next day. By the end of the week he is
getting up early every day and working into the night. He multiplies his profits
quickly.
Early in the second week
he acquires a cart to transport several boxes of tomatoes at a time, but before
a month is up he sells the cart to buy a broken-down pickup truck.
At the end of a year he
owns three old trucks. His two sons have left their neighborhood gangs to help
him with the tomato business, his wife is buying the tomatoes, and his daughter
is taking night courses at the community college so she can keep books for him.
By the end of the second
year he has a dozen very nice used trucks and employs fifteen previously
unemployed people, all selling tomatoes.
He continues to work
hard.
Time passes and at the
end of the fifth year he owns a fleet of nice trucks and a warehouse that his
wife supervises, plus two tomato farms that the boys manage. The tomato
company's payroll has put hundreds of homeless and jobless people to work. His
daughter reports that the business grossed over one million dollars. Planning
for the future, he decides to buy some life insurance. Consulting with an
insurance adviser, he picks an insurance plan to fit his new circumstances. Then
the adviser asks him for his e-mail address in order to send the final documents
electronically.
When the man replies that
he doesn't have time to mess with a computer and has no e-mail address, the
insurance man is stunned, "What, you don't have e-mail? No computer? No
Internet? Just think where you would be today if you'd had all of that five
years ago!"
"Ha" snorts the man. "If
I'd had e-mail five years ago I would be sweeping floors at Microsoft and making
$5.35 an hour."
Which brings us to the
moral of the story:
Since you got this story
by e-mail, you're probably closer to being a janitor than a millionaire. Sadly,
I received it also.