What is like being CFO of the Savannah Bananas with Tim Naddy
In this episode of FP&A Unlocked, Paul Barnhurst and Glenn Snyder sit down with Dr. Tim Naddy, CFO of the Savannah Bananas, to discuss the unique world of finance in a sports and entertainment organization. Tim shares how he manages FP&A for a fast-growing, multi-team baseball league, balancing operational efficiency with fan engagement, budgeting for multiple teams, and ensuring the internal finance function supports the entire organization’s growth.
Tim is the CFO of the Savannah Bananas, a wildly innovative and entertaining baseball organization. With experience in public accounting, higher education, and consulting, Tim brings a unique perspective on financial management, teaching, and operational strategy. He has also authored a book for creatives and non-finance professionals on strategic financial management, helping others understand how to transform ideas into sustainable business ventures.
Expect to Learn:
How FP&A functions in an unconventional sports and entertainment organization
Budgeting and financial planning across multiple teams and events
Managing risk, contracts, and operational logistics for traveling events
Lessons on aligning finance with organizational growth and fan engagement
How innovative business models and creativity intersect with FP&A
Here are a few relevant quotes from the episode:
“Finance isn’t a stumbling block, it’s a support function that ensures internal teams can succeed.” – Dr. Tim Naddy
“You don’t need to be from an area to support a team, you just need to feel the vibe.” – Dr. Tim Naddy
Dr. Tim Naddy provides a behind-the-scenes look at managing FP&A for the Savannah Bananas, balancing operational efficiency with creative fan engagement. He highlights how finance supports growth across multiple teams and events, ensuring budgets, logistics, and resources are aligned. Listeners gain insights into innovative financial management, practical FP&A strategies, and the importance of adaptability in dynamic, non-traditional organizations.
Follow Tim:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drtimnaddy221b/
Website:https://www.houndtalint.com/
Earn Your CPE Credit For CPE credit, please go to earmarkcpe.com, listen to the episode, download the app, answer a few questions, and earn your CPE certification. To earn education credits for the FPAC Certificate, take the quiz on earmark and contact Paul Barnhurst for further details.
In Today’s Episode
[00:00] – Trailer
[05:07] – Bananas Brand Story
[08:12] – Teaching & Book
[11:14] – CFO Misconceptions
[13:14] – FP&A Process & League
[18:12] – Revenue & Ticketing
[26:00] – Logistics & Operations
[32:28] – Team Management
[46:51] – Banana Ball Rules
[54:42] – FP&A Advice & Closing
Full Show Transcript:
Host: Paul Barnhurst (00:00):
Welcome to another episode of FP&A on Block where Strategy meets Finance. I'm thrilled this week to be joined by my co-host Glenn Snyder. Glenn, how are you doing?
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (00:10):
Doing great. How are you doing?
Host: Paul Barnhurst (00:12):
I am doing awesome, I have to say, Glenn I know is really excited for this episode. If anyone knows Glenn, all you have to do if you've ever watched a video is look at his wall. How many baseballs are there? Do you know?
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (00:24):
I have 167 individually signed balls from members of the Hall of Fame.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (00:29):
There we go, 167. So I don't even have to ask what his favourite sport is. This week we're going to be joined by the CEO of the Savannah Bananas. Dr. Dr. Tim Naddy. Doctor, welcome to the show.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (00:46):
How are you? Quick adjustment there. It's C-F-O-C-E-O would
Host: Paul Barnhurst (00:50):
Probably be, wait, did I say CEO?
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (00:51):
The CEO would probably be pretty upset that I just took his job on your show. I
Host: Paul Barnhurst (00:54):
Meant CFO. Thank you.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (00:57):
Totally fine. No, no. Yeah, doing great. Thanks for asking. Once we first met, gosh, a couple years ago at the Financial Accounting and Technology Expo, which is about as nerdy as it gets in finance. I saw this guy over there wearing cool hats, had a giant beard, and I was like, Hey, I want to be that guy's friend. And you're like, Hey, I want to be your friend. And then we just made a friendship and now you're introducing me to other friends who are like baseball and this, that, and other stuff. But we're here to talk about FP&A today and see how we can make it fun for people out there who just don't have a home. They don't live in accounting, they don't live in finance. They're kind of right in that middle. So maybe we can sway some to either side.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (01:33):
We will definitely have some fun. Before we jump into our questions, why don't you tell us the audience a little bit about your background. I'm going to let you introduce yourself.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (01:40):
Here's your history. I appreciate that. Thank you. Well, okay. In a nutshell, right, very Austin Powers in a nutshell. Grew up in Coco Beach, Florida. I went to University of Florida after five years, graduated with a bachelor's and master's in accounting while in school, got my CPA licence, which again, I believe is the crown jewel of our profession. So you guys can all throw Barb at me later on if you want to. But then moved over to, got a job over in Tampa with PricewaterhouseCoopers. Worked with pwc, Deloitte and another local firm inside public accounting for about eight, nine years. Moved out public accounting into get this an internet platform because in 2008, that was all the rage until of course the bottom dropped out of the housing market and investors didn't want to put money into new things. They wanted to try to save their current investments.
(02:24):
I ended that year after four W twos at Get this a real estate organisation. So I got to watch that one kind of whittle down, and it was private equity owned, so it got some good private equity experience. What kind of reports are out there that are superfluous to running anything in the business? But this is just because they have a women of fancy and they're like run a report and they're like, ah, I can't run a report. So that was a fun experience. But from there, once I finished my doctorate, I took a job in 2012 with a shorter university as an on-ground professor, and that's where I really learned that I love being a professor. I love the performance aspect. I love bringing the technical to the tangible. I just enjoy being around youth and helping them make better decisions. And so from my perspective, I was in my element, but naturally people like us, we have a proclivity to learn.
(03:14):
And when we stop learning, we get a little bored, start adding on Dovetail this and add this thing. Well, I decided I needed to start a business because that's what you do when you're a professor. And so started a data company, ran that for about nine years, had defence contracts and was working with healthcare. But what was really exciting is that we kind of branched out into sports at analytics, specifically scouting analytics. So think Moneyball, but now bring it all the way into 2023. And now you're looking at it saying, okay, how can we make this draught room more efficient? Well guys, here's the problem. I solved a problem that nobody wanted solved because part of the draught, part of the fun of the draught is actually arguing with the guy across the table who thinks you're an idiot and throwing mugs at you and stuff.
(04:00):
And you're like, no, the data says this. And it was like, I don't care what the data says, I know what it says. And he's like smoking a cigar. So all that said, got to where I couldn't sell the software. Everybody's like, this is great, but you got to make money doing this stuff. So I ended up doing one year of CFO consulting with Clifton Larson Allen. And from there, ironically, I was travelling way too much and decided, Hey, there's this kooky baseball team down in Savannah of Georgia that needs a finance guy. Maybe I'll go down there and imply my trade there. Well, the instant I land with bags, putting it down, I put down some roots in Savannah and they decide, Hey, let's take this show on the road. So since for the last four seasons, if you will, I've been at the helm of the finance arm and trying to keep this travelling circus moving, literally duct taping the wings as we're flying the plane. And that's where I am today.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (04:51):
Alrighty, love the background. Glen, you're about to say, so
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (04:54):
Great background, obviously how you got there. But tell us a little bit more about, and people are not too familiar with Bananas and the Sports League, and I also understand you got a book that just came out. Tell us a little bit about that.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (05:07):
I do. Yeah. So first question first is, so people that don't really understand or haven't yet been brought into the cult of the bananas, it is a giant bubble. It's really funny because you can go around the United States and ask, and people are like, they'll look at the logo and you get one of two reactions. The reaction is like, or it's so the people that are, you don't have to explain anything. They're already inside the cult. They love everything about the bananas, the familial nature, the fans first approach, everything about just the kookiness, the backflips, the dancing, all of the showmanship that comes with baseball. Yes, I said, baseball, I know all those little balls behind you are starting to smoke. They're about to be all on fire by the time this podcast is over. Not that we take the traditionalists and we step on them.
(05:54):
We actually embrace the tradition of this amazing game called baseball, and actually give it just a little bit of a kicker on the entertainment side, the shorter game things going on all around you, very three ring circus. There's a game in front of you, but there's a guy over there and a dugout and there's a girl over there doing something crazy, and all the fans are just a giant family. So that is banana ball in and of itself. Now, as far as the second question, which I can't remember because I was too excited to answer the first question, ask it the bar.
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (06:26):
You remember that?
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (06:26):
Yeah. Yeah. So all the while I also, one of the things that I do to put on the SCAD hat I teach at Savannah College of Art Design. I've been teaching here actually ever since I've moved down to Savannah, and I absolutely love it. Again, being in the classroom is what I really, really enjoy doing. Well, while there I was part of the genesis of the Sole School of Creative Business Leadership and what they realised that SCAD is that you have all these students, by the way, if I call them kids, it's my fault. They're all younger than me. They could be my kids. But these students that come in, they have great intellectual property just swimming around their heads. SCAD does a really good job of pulling that intellectual property out and creating these amazing portfolios so that when they go into fashion or luxury and brand management or industrial design or video game, whatever it is, they can go in with this confidence that, Hey, I kick ass and I do, and this is the kind of stuff that I'm going to bring to your establishment.
(07:22):
But what they realise is that some of these kids, when they're going out to their new employers, probably making good money, these artists, they do well. SCAD is a very giant stepping stone for a lot of artists. So even though they're making good money, they started seeing that people were a little myth because, well, but that's my idea. And maybe they're paying you a hundred thousand dollars to work here, but $10 million off the idea that you brought into the door. And the instant you sign that piece of paper and said, anything you do when you're working on our computers, you're doing this thing and the other, we now own it. Well hold the phone, hold the phone. We need to make sure that you guys understand that your intellectual property is yours. Nothing wrong with going to work for other people, but if you really want to do something with the ip, let's teach you how to generate your own income streams with that ip.
(08:12):
So that was kind of the genesis behind the School of Business leadership. And my role in it is that I've got to create a class called Strategic Financial Management. Told you guys earlier that it's like three big words to basically say how not to get screwed in business. And so what I realised is that when they first initially wanted this course to be around, they wanted it to be a managerial accounting course, a cost accounting course, but they were using an intermediate cost book. So they didn't even ask an accountant like, Hey, what would you serve up to people who want nothing to do with accounting? And so it was definitely not this 900 page manifesto of what to do and No, get this Bible out of here. We need to have something that we can actually sink our teeth into. Well, there is nothing you can sink your teeth into that marries, entrepreneurialism and cost accounting. And so I decided, let's write it. So wrote it, it's out and came out in March. So this is the book. So it's at EYM. Every decision you make, what's the cost of the dream? And if you want the cliff notes, pause your screen right now. Okay, there we go. But the whole point of this, the book though, is the idea that as creatives, and by the way, I wrote it specifically for creatives, but really it's just non-accountants or it's people in their, I can
Host: Paul Barnhurst (09:28):
Read it. I'm not an account.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (09:30):
Okay, well, there you go. So people in their journey, whether they're, they're financial people, whether they're accounting people, whether they're marketing people, what have you, but they have an idea. But understanding that the idea is just the beginning. How do you cultivate this idea and mature this idea to where you can now get out of your mom's basement and actually go out and maybe get some funds, do an investor presentation, get some funding, get some investors, really put some rocket fuel behind your idea and then launch it. Well, there's so many things that you have to do to prepare these businesses in the FP A world. You guys are always looking forward. So this is exactly what I'm trying to teach, these non-accountants, these creatives who the last thing on the planet they want to do is accounting, but they don't even know they're doing accounting because they just kind of slip it into this one, this anecdote, this story, this story, this story.
(10:21):
And all of a sudden it's like, what did I just learn? It's like you just learned how to do cost accounting 1 0 1 is what you learned and how to build a business and how to launch it, how to market this, that, and the other. So that is the gist of this. I would call it a textbook. I would say you could probably pick it up at an airport if an airport wanted a book this big. But yeah, not super excited about it so far. Had a really good reception, certainly in the CPA world, but a lot of students are really enjoying it as well.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (10:47):
I almost went like this when you said textbook. That's
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (10:51):
Right. That's right.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (10:53):
No, thank you for sharing that. That's awesome. You're welcome. Appreciate learning a little bit about the book. So shifting back to our Savannah Bananas and working for a sports franchise, what are some of the misconceptions here? What do people picture your job being a CFO, or you hear people talking about, then we'll talk about what you really do.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (11:14):
So misconceptions are that it's fun every day, all day, right? They also think that we do the same thing every day because from the accounting and finance perspective, like, oh, accounting and finance, you can do it anywhere. That's true. There's so many moving parts in an organisation like this, and by the way, this is any entertainment organisation. It's not just a Savannah Bananas, but the Savannah Bananas. It just happens to be we're in hypergrowth mode. So everything, every decision we make, it's an 80 20 decision. Do we have 80% of information? Alright, make the decision, oh, it didn't work. Okay, come back, pivot, go. It's very, very fast. And we experiment, we test, and if it doesn't work out, then fine pivot, go the other way. What we're trying to do is have the most efficient approach to really putting the best show that we can out there for the fans. And all the while, my job internally is to make sure the internal fans, the HR department as the creative department, the bananas television department, all the people that I would consider my internal fans, that I need to make sure that they can be successful. And so that finance isn't a stumbling block in front of them, but it's actually a support function that's right behind them doing everything that needs to be done to make them successful. If they're successful, then finance naturally will rise with the rest of the organisation.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (12:30):
So you're not signing the player contracts.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (12:33):
Well, I've had, when we used CHATT PT to write them, I don't know. I mean, I guess I could sign 'em. No, I don't sign the contracts. That's a reserve for the CEO who was a CEO before this podcast started, remember?
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (12:50):
So Tim, let's talk about the FP&A function within the banana. So tell us a little bit about what the FP&A function is like, your budget process, how often do you reforecast? And here's the unique thing, because the Savannah Bananas are a team, but you guys are also a league. How do the other teams in the league come into play when you're looking at forecasting and budget
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (13:14):
Budget's? A strange thing around here, because this thing is growing in leaps and bounds, and let's just go back to this. All the teams are essentially located inside Savannah, Georgia. So everybody lives here throughout the year. It's very similar to formerly the XFL, the UFL. So United Football League and the XFL merged became the UFL now. So they are, I think all eight of their teams. They might have 10 now, but they're all essentially located, and then they go and they play games in different places. That's very similar to us. Everything is company owned. There are no franchises, there are no external dollars coming in. Everything is owned and operated by Jesse Cole and his wife Emily. And so what that allows us to do is it allows us to be very flexible in the way that we manage the team, but also extremely consistent across all the brands.
(14:03):
So this past year we launched two more brands, the local beach coconuts and the famed Indianapolis Clowns, who by the way this weekend are going to be in Indianapolis for the first showing. It's going to be an amazing weekend in Indianapolis when you're running this organisation, it really becomes, they become units. So there's 20, 23 players, there's a slate of coaches and maybe some baseball ops people for that team, for this team, for this team, for this team. So six teams across the board. It's not like exponential headache. It's more of like, okay, if you built the process for the first team, the second team, the third team, then it just assimilates right in. I mean, from a spreadsheet perspective, you just add another row, add another column, and everything just kind of falls right in. You just drag the formula across and it works, right?
Host: Paul Barnhurst (14:48):
Yeah. You drop the next team into the column, you put whatever other things you need to add to it, we start calculating their numbers.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (14:56):
And from a chart of accounts perspective, you have the 0.11 would be the bananas. Point one two would be the party animals, and it's 1 3, 1 4, 1 5. So you just build out the table. Two eventually have eight teams, which is where Jesse would like to be eventually at eight teams. So we already had the infrastructure set up for eight teams. Just right now there's a bunch of blanks in Team seven and eight, so that stuff's not too difficult. I think to answer your question about the bananas versus the league, you are correct. There is a branding issue that comes up when we initially were the Savannah Bananas and everybody called us Savannah Bananas, but our technical name, our legal name is actually fans First Entertainment fans. First Entertainment is the umbrella organisation, not only over the Savannah Bananas, but also every other team in the league. So what the interesting thing that we we're learning today is that what are people going to think when they come to a show?
(15:52):
Because it's now Banana Ball. It's not the Savannah Bananas, it's Banana Ball. So it could be the party animals versus the coconuts, and are people going to show up and think, oh no, the bananas aren't here. Oh, I'm so disappointed. Or they're going to be like, dude, this is banana ball. This is going to be great. Each one of these teams has their own shtick. So you got the bananas are the All American team, the ones they beat down their chest, everybody's super excited to see them. The party animals are supposed to be the alter ego, the bananas after dark, they're little edgier. They have punk rock and things like that. Then the firefighters came along and they are the ones there. They're local hometown heroes. They're the firefighters, the police, the EMTs, the teachers, all these local heroes that make living in small town America.
(16:36):
Amazing. Then you take the next one, which is the Texas Tailgaters. Now it's the first one that we had, obviously other than Savannah Bananas, first one that actually acts a regional name attached to it. And the thought was, well, are we going to place the team in Texas or are we just going to make Texas kind of their entire home state? If they ever play in Texas, are they the home team? And that's exactly what we ended up doing, and I'll explain to you the reason why in a second. So then after that, we had the local Beach Coconuts, which is actually a made up name, but it's based off of Cocoa Beach, which is awesome, where I'm from. But then the last one is the Indianapolis Clowns. Again, another regional team. But that was born out of history. It's tradition because the Indianapolis Clowns were an actual, gosh, I would almost be willing to say that they were one of the original Banana teams in the way that they expressed.
(17:20):
Not only were they amazing athletes, but they were doing kind of kooky things on the field already. So in this case, you have all these teams that are out there, and from our perspective, from a finance perspective, it's not very difficult to plan for. You just got to plan for another 23 bodies. How do you get 'em logistically across the United States, the hotels, the airfare, the buses, all those things. It just becomes, instead of Fourfour, you have five, six and six six. And so now you have just another couple units. So the budget does increase, but it increases from the standpoint of it doesn't increase by two, it increases by one because basically what ends up happening is if we had four teams, that would mean we were playing at two different places at the same time. Now that we have six teams, we're playing at three different places at the same time. So our budget actually increases one third as opposed to a much, much bigger than it would be
Host: Paul Barnhurst (18:12):
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Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (18:59):
Now, something that is really important when you talk about this brand and shifting this brand from Banana Ball, right? Had people say, well, why don't you just rename the sport to some other names? No, because the name is Banana Ball. That's the genesis of it. So just because Savannah Bananas are, there's like, it's not going to call it party animal ball or coconut ball. So Banana Ball is the sport. Banana Ball Championship League is the league, and the Savannah Bananas are the flagship of the entire league. But that doesn't mean they're always going to win. It means that they have to compete just like anybody else. But what we found is that as we've kind of transitioned from the Savannah Bananas are going to be in town to banana balls coming to town, we're still selling out stadiums, we're still selling, the merchandise is still flying off the shelves.
(19:47):
People are still want the tickets. They still have the big lines. And what we've realised is that we've been able to transition it off of the bananas. Now when the bananas are in town, everybody's kooky that one sells out the fastest, but it doesn't mean that when the bananas aren't in town that people aren't still excited to come watch. It's just a fantastic show and the bananas aren't even there. So at least that carried over and we were able to shift the brand from Savannah Bananas to Banana Ball, and now it's becoming more of, this is just what, when Banana Ball comes to town, oh my goodness, you're about to see a great show. What has allowed this to happen is that you talk to anybody from the northeast, say Pittsburgh, who's their team?
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (20:30):
Pirates?
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (20:31):
The Pirates, if they're from Philly, who's their team?
(20:34):
Okay? So pick anybody from the Northeast and you basically say it's actually done regionally. So you usually identify with the local team because that's the one everybody at the bar is talking about. Everybody at the office is talking about everybody at the school yard is talking about. And so you become a Steelers fan because everybody at Pittsburgh, you just have to be a Steelers fan. And if you're that one oddball, you're probably getting beat up on the playground. But the thought is that because the original affinity toward a particular team was who is my home team and who does my dad support? Who does, where did my mom go to school? Stuff like that. Because of social media, and this is what I think is genius about what the bananas have been able to really grab onto. Social media has eradicated all regional barriers. There is no reason that you can't be Oakland Athletics fan having lived in wait for, I'll wait for your face. Here it comes. If I live in Savannah, I can be an Oakland Athletics fan because maybe it just resonates with 'em. Maybe I know somebody that would just say
Host: Paul Barnhurst (21:34):
Athletics,
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (21:34):
Don't
Host: Paul Barnhurst (21:34):
Say Oakland. Come on, more
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (21:36):
Athletic, they don't exist anymore. Well, there you go, then that's why I'm a fan. So they're moving. I kidding. But the idea is is that because I can communicate and connect with that team from one coast to another coast, social media has enabled that I'm now developing affinities with their fan base, with their players, with different things. I don't have to live in that area in order to support that team anymore. And I think that's what the Savannah Bananas have done and Banana Ball has done,
(22:04):
Is that they've taken advantage of the vibe. So again, the vibes that I gave you about the party animals and the coconuts, like the tailgaters. If you like whiskey, if you like nascar, you like country music, you're a Tailgater fan, but maybe one night you're just feeling a little edgy and you're like, I'm done. Those country songs are all styling the sand. I want some punk rock. You could be a party animal fan that night. It doesn't really matter. And the great thing is it's all in entertainment. It's all show, if you will. So it's not like you're abandoning your team. You're just feeling like, Hey, my vibe is this tonight. It's like, yeah, I could be this team. I don't really care who wins or loses, but I just want to be part of that crowd tonight. And I think that's the key. I think that's what really has resonated throughout the United States is that you don't need to be from that area to really jump on this bandwagon. You just need to kind of feel, okay, how do I feel today? I feel kind of loose. I feel very four 20, I'm going to be a Coconuts fan today. So that's kind of the vibe.
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (23:06):
So when just kind of pulling all this back to finance a little bit, I mean what was really interesting is Major League Baseball, the comparison, each individual team is a separate company. They're separate franchise. But what really what you're doing, you're effectively saying is each team is a department within the same company. So whether you are an HR department or you are a coconuts department, you have personnel, you have travel expenses, you have all those different things, but you are one company, which is a very different way. I think many people who different
Host: Paul Barnhurst (23:39):
Than any major league sports in the us.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (23:42):
Well, again, not the similar to
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (23:46):
The Wolf might be similar.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (23:47):
Well, no, because that was an entertainment thing and they only had two teams and they travel both teams. So in this case, this is an actual league, and you are correct, it is its own department. It's called baseball operations is what it is. And so all of the players are over there, all the coaches are over there. We have baseball operations over there, and they have their own budget. Their budget is paid for by ticket sales. So from that perspective, as you start looking, kind of give you a little bit more insight, the way that I've carved this place up is that we have what's called the diamond in the dugout. Diamond is the show. It is the live events that we are putting on. It is not only the team, but it's also the entertainment. It's the food and beverage, it's the game operations, the
Host: Paul Barnhurst (24:32):
It's the full cost for the show, for the event,
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (24:33):
Everything for the show. So Diamond is like what's out there on the stage. The dugout is everything that's behind the scenes stuff that you don't, people would think that like bananas television, oh, well that should be a diamond. Well, actually no, it's not. Yes, we do make money off of media contracts and what have you, but they're actually in support of the live events. We know our flywheel starts with the live events. If we don't have a live event, we don't have the content, we don't have the traffic, we don't have the demand, which then the flywheel will just start slowing down. Our live events is where the energy really pushes. And once those live events are there, everything else is captured in that flywheel. Just start spinning as fast as it can and also creates enough momentum for other flywheels like youth tournaments to start working and camps to start working.
(25:17):
And so this whole thing is moving off of live events. So in a sense that a normal baseball operation where they would take the team and go over to, let's say say the Yankees are playing over at ka pick Aite rivalry in Boston. They take the team, they go to Boston, and the only people that are there are the Yankees in Boston. Boston has all their home crowd. They have their food and beverage, they have other home merchandise, and then the Yankees just show up and they play a game. Our couple, what we do is that when we come into a town, we rent out the venue. Venue contracts are there, there's a venue settlement process at the end, but certainly in some of the bluer states, bluer cities, we have to work with unions and things like that and learn how to do all those different things, which is fantastic.
(26:00):
Guys. The first time I learned about a union, I was plugging something into a wall and he goes, what you doing? And I was like, it's plugging this in. He goes, let me do that for you. And so he did it for me and goes, hi, I'm the representative of the union. I was like, oh, they take this stuff for real, but fantastic setting up security road closures, merchandise, all these different things. We bring it all to the venue and we basically take it over. We bring home team, we bring away team, we bring the merchandise, we bring the ticket scanners, we bring everybody with the exception of the food and beverage, the local venues that and some ancillary services. That's where they make their money, and then they'll also supply ushers and what have you because they know their park. So from that perspective, when we go into a location, we take over the whole location and then put on the best show that we can pack up, leave it better than we found it, and then put it on a truck and haul ass to the next city.
(26:53):
So yeah, when I say travelling circus, we are doing this, but here's the thing. We're doing this in three different locations throughout the United States. On any given weekend, you think about one show travelling, that's enough of a beast, right? Then last year we had two shows travelling at the same time. It's like, okay, get a little bit, we have two broadcasts going at the same time, two BTV broadcasts, which are always showing on YouTube for free for our fans. But now with the third one, it's like, holy smokes. This is not just a, we just need a couple more trucks. These teams come with some panache. We have giant sets for the coconuts and the clowns, like how are we going to move all the bands, the entertainment people, all of these things. But we're doing it. We're doing it in three different locations per weekend.
(27:42):
And it seems that from a finance perspective, even though this thing is grow with human resources and other things that we need to do, the finance function, we're doing this all with five people because we don't need to grow exponentially. We just need to make sure our processes are nailed and that our efficiencies, if we see something a little wonky, we jump on it and we fix it so that we don't have to keep paying for the sins of a bad decision week after week after week. It's like, no, we got to fix that right now, and we do fix it, and then we move forward with better efficiency. So it allows us to watch this growth come up around us and not have to worry about, oh gosh, do we need another accountant? Do we need another CPA? Do we need to go outsource something? We're able to handle it internally and it's awesome. My team is amazing.
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (28:28):
Let me ask you one other quick follow-up question. I'll turn over to Paul, but one of the misconceptions that I've met a few people who work, I've met someone who, for example, works, runs finance for the Boston Red Sox, and he was telling me, he's like, look, everyone comes do it when they want to talk about the player contracts, what's in the news? But he said the finance department, the FP&A team, they're more about working with the vendors, getting the merchandising, looking at the security and those types of things that go to how do you actually manage the organisation and the other ancillary things because the contracts are what's in the news, but he is like, yeah, we don't really do that. And it was one of those things that I was like, you know what? I never even thought about it. But yeah, that makes total sense.
(29:13):
So I'm assuming similar thing for you, you guys, yeah, you have a TV contract that probably gets negotiated once every two, three years, but you guys were thinking about merchandising sales. How do you go over and market differently? What vendors are going to come in? What are the ticket prices that you're going to charging in different locations? Because maybe if you're going to be in a more expensive area, like in New York City versus Savannah, you might go over and charge higher prices because the cost of Yankee Stadium might be more expensive. So those are the things I'm guessing that your finance team is kind of thinking about and solving, not involved in the stuff that people are like, Hey, what is the cost to go and pay that player?
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (29:51):
Okay, so that's good insight. From a traditional baseball operation, there's nothing traditional about what we're doing. We are probably akin to a Broadway show moving around the country because when we come to town, we have to generate own marketing, we have to generate our own following, and when people come to a Broadway show, they come because someone said, Hey, I got a couple tickets. Hey, you got to do this. It, it's like the local marketing in that area. We just happen to have an extremely big microphone to get this out there to everybody, and we've done a really good job over the years of amassing a nice big audience so that when we do put it out there, it gets out far and wide that hey, bananas are coming to town. One of the really cool things just kind of give you an idea, when we were in Texas a and MA couple of weeks ago, we were there for Texas a and m, the hel of the 12th Man College Station.
(30:41):
It's going to be amazing. A hundred thousand people. Well, that's our biggest show that we've ever done, but it was a brainchild of Jesse to say, Hey, since we're going to do the biggest show we've ever done, why don't we do the smallest show we've ever done? So what they did is they decided to go ahead and do a pop-up game at a local high school on the Thursday before the game, and it was the first thousand people. They basically announced it that morning, first thousand people in get a show, and it was a full-on show. It was fully produced, all dances, everything. And those thousand people were treated to an impromptu show by two amazing sets of athletes who had all entertainment and everything right there at a high school venue. And the poll was immediate. The way it was described was, have you ever seen filled of dreams when you see at the end all the cars with their headlights all strung out?
(31:35):
It was very similar to that. The bus was driving by cars along roads that were all parked along the side of a road, and this is, was it Navasota, Texas? So this was a really big deal, and what it showed is that we do have the ability if we wanted to generate a really quick fury of fans, but also can we put on a show even at a thousand people, can we put on a show with the same amount of energy that we would for in two days? We're about to do it in front of a hundred thousand people, and the answer is, yes, we can. And so that's one of the things that we try to look at from our perspective. Our biggest things from an FP a's perspective are trying to look at the venue contracts, making sure that we're agreeing to things that allow us them to make money as the venue, but also for us to take what we need out of it.
(32:28):
You mentioned that regionally the ticket prices should change. We actually charge the same price across, so our normal ticket is $35 at home, right across the street here at Grace's Stadium and the tickets for a major league baseball, I would say let's, let's go up tickets for AAA or MILB would be $35. They're $35. So now there are some tickets out there for the Backstage Pass or the little things that give you a little bit more insight, give you time in front of the players to get signatures and things like that and pictures and people will pay for those. It's an elevated experience, but for everybody else, it's a $35 ticket. Now you go to the MLB, right? So pick any major league baseball or in this case any NFL or ncaa, you're looking at tickets anywhere between $40 for the upper bowl and $60 for the lower bowl.
(33:21):
$60 is the highest level of ticket that you're going to see if you're out there looking for tickets and they're north of 60 bucks, unless it's a special ticket, which you can only get from us, you can't get, there's special tickets from any scalpers. We just don't give them, we have to come from us. Anything north of 60 is a fake ticket. It's a scalp ticket or it's a speculative ticket. So be extremely careful if you're out on StubHub or all these different places trying to get or trying to get some tickets because I can tell you that you're not going to get 'em. You're going to overpay. They're going to send you your money back. You're going to think you have 'em.
(33:58):
Your kids are going to love you and they're going to hate you because you don't actually have the tickets. But that's pretty much the gist of what we do. There's no reason to keep jacking up the rates on tickets because we still have, we're selling out places and it really comes down to if we're paying our bills and we're able to take care of all these new things that we're trying to pull in place, then what's the point in jacking up the ticket prices just to make a little bit more money? That's not a very fan's first approach. Now, if there was an initiative where we're say we're saving money because we want to go build the next the banana land like a physical banana land and we need the money to put in for construction and things like that, then that money's going towards something.
(34:39):
But if it's just to pat our coffers, could we do it? Yeah, we could. But at the end of the day, what's the point? Why would we want to just increase prices just for the sake of, because we can. That's what everybody else does, and one of our core principles is that what everybody else is doing do the exact opposite. Our long game is to gather fans, not dollars, because if we gather a billion fans, Jesse's big dream is to have be a billion fan brand. If you have a billion fans and they all bring $1, that's a billion dollars, guys. So are you sure that's how the math works? It's a little
Host: Paul Barnhurst (35:17):
Math. Calculate.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (35:18):
It's little math. Little math,
Host: Paul Barnhurst (35:19):
Yeah. Times a bigger numbers some an account.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (35:21):
I'm not an fp a guy. You guys can put that in your models
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (35:24):
That that's accounting math right there.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (35:28):
A few questions, just curiosity. Do you guys own the stadium then?
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (35:33):
We do not. It's owned by the city of Savannah.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (35:35):
It's owned by the city, so there's no stadiums you guys own, not like in most professional sports, not always, but typically nowadays, franchise often owns the sports, whether it's a separate entity or not. They often own the sports arena. You're completely renting, so it's totally different. Capital expenditure, I mean there's cap expenses here, obviously it's just a different model from that side of the operating versus capital expenditure, so you don't have that huge depreciation expense every year.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (36:04):
I would love to have some depreciation expense, man. Anything to take off some of this taxes. It'd be great. I mean, I'm sure for the don't have the luxury
Host: Paul Barnhurst (36:11):
Because you own, that's still trucks. There's still equipment, just not the huge arena cost. That's
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (36:17):
Right. That's right. And you don't have to negotiate with the cities for how much money they're going to put in.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (36:22):
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Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (37:32):
That's correct. Where it comes down with the partnership with the city is that, so they obviously take care of everything around the stadium. Since we're inside the stadium and we're pretty much the tenant of the stadium, if they want to have events there, certainly you can have events there, but we have to have people sign waivers because even though the city actually owns it, we are still liable if someone gets injured. So a lot of times they'll want to do like a 5K because it's nestled at the end of a pretty big park in Savannah, and so they'll do a five Ks and maybe they'll run around outfield the warning track or something like that, and now it's all turf, so we don't have to worry about stuff getting patted down, but because of that, we do have to have their people sign waivers saying, Hey, look, if you chip up and you get a turf burn, that's not on us, that's on the organiser.
(38:19):
So little things like that just from risk management perspective. But yeah, we ran out the facility and we've taken on some of the responsibility for the utilities because naturally we're the only ones there, so it makes sense. But certainly the upkeep, anything north of a certain threshold, the city is obligated to come in and fix it because it's either a safety issue or it's something that they need to keep their asset in workable condition for their tenant to be able to use it. Other than that, we've taken a lot of the brunt off of them because there's been certain things that we need to do. For example, when we added the two new teams, actually now with four new teams, we only have two locker rooms. The bananas are in one locker room, the party animals in the other locker room, those are the first two teams.
(39:00):
Well, where are you going to put the other four teams? Well, we had a temporary structure out in left field and decided that's probably not where it needs to go because when we got the next two teams, now we have four teams that's 60 dudes. No, I'm sorry, close to a hundred guys with coaches. And so we decided, you know what, let's go ahead and build a centre field operations centre that has the locker rooms and dwelt has showers and everything, and then you move over. We have a workout facility in there. Really nice one that, so Anex helped. So Anex out of South Carolina helped us put together, and then we have a really nice athletic training facility right next to some batting cages and things like that. So certainly was it an investment for us to put it on city property? Absolutely. That is a permanent building for the city now, and it can only be used as what it's intended to be used as. So certainly it's one of those things where from a capital expenditure per piece, yeah, it's ours, we have to insure it and all that stuff, but it's sitting on city property. So it's one of those where you look at it and you go, oh man, that stinks. I wish we would've put that on wheels just in case if we needed to go anywhere, we could take that thing with us because a beautiful building. Sure. If
Host: Paul Barnhurst (40:09):
Things turn out that you have to move elsewhere, you have this big huge asset that yes, you own the building, you don't own the land. It's not
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (40:16):
Like you
Host: Paul Barnhurst (40:16):
Can just pick it up and easily move it.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (40:18):
Correct, correct. Yeah. But that's part of the partnership with the city is that we want to make sure that we maintain their facility because for as long as we are here in Savannah, it's good for them and it's also good for us because we want this facility to be as first class as we can get it. Now it's an old stadium. I think this year is actually the hundredth year of Grayson Stadium. So when you walk around, if you walk around the concourse, there are large pictures of Hank Aaron and I mean pick a handful of guys that they have played here in the past. So from a baseball history perspective, this is one of the places where a lot of really, really neat people have played. So we don't want to lose that with the fervour of the banana ball because our root is from baseball, but it's also we need to be able to extend out and show, Hey, this is where we're going with this. So we're still holding on to the traditions of the past, but bringing a show for the future.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (41:17):
Do one more and then we'll shift. I know Glenn ask a few questions on baseball. So again, so the goal here is you said, at least for her right now is eight teams. How many games a year would you ultimately like to have? How big of an operation are we thinking here? And I know it can always subject to change and all that, but with 18, what would the schedule look like?
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (41:37):
Well, so right now we play from February to October, our playoffs in October, and then so all the teams play 60 interleague games. So everybody has to have 60 games, 30 home, 30 away, right? Well, right now we're sitting at about 197 games, which is, and that's all in, right? That's not, I know in major league baseball, what is it, 182 games, you have to play
Host: Paul Barnhurst (42:01):
162, not counting preseason or postseason
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (42:05):
1 62 without preseason and without postseason.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (42:08):
Okay, so all in, if a team makes it, then you're probably playing about 180 games, give or take. Each team, the way we do it is about 60 games each. All that means though is that if you were to add two more teams and that had to put another 60 games on those guys, it doesn't mean that you're playing another 60 games. It just means that you have to filter in those games across eight teams as opposed to six. Right now, it's kind of hard to say because 197 games, that's a lot of games. That means that we're putting on three shows per weekend throughout the entire summer months from February to October. It gets pretty daunting from the standpoint of stretching, not the players and the coaches, they're fine. It's the internal stretching that needs to happen. If we add two more teams, the increase in the entertainment team, the increase in the logistics, the increase, again, I don't think in the finance world we need to make any changes, but the rest of the show needs to, needs to pop up human resource wise and financially so that we can actually support another show on the road at the same time.
(43:11):
Four shows every weekend. Because again, one of the things that people miss on this is that we travel both teams, and so it's not like just the team is going in and the visitors at this location and the home team's already there, the home, the venue's already taken care of. The food and beverage is already taken care of, and you just drop a team in there and play a game and leave. We bring everything and we do everything on the road except food and beverage. So that means all the merch, all the ticketing, everything goes out, but we're doing that here, here, here and now here. How in the world do you do that? Right? So we're learning a lot this year from that third game of how much can we really stretch the internal components of this organisation before? And God forbid there's no snapping.
(43:56):
But I think that we're about to go into some pretty dog days of summer, and this is where you start really testing the metal of the team to see, okay, how hard and fast can we run this team without burning anybody out? That it's a very serious thing that we look at mental fitness, physical fitness, spiritual fitness at times, making sure that people are ready to be on the road at Sometimes we try not to do back to back to back, but sometimes it's back to back to back to back to back because there is just nobody else to do that job.
(44:33):
That's one of the struggles that we have right now is as we grow is what kind of human resources can we put in place? It's funny. People say, well, working at the bananas, it must be crazy. It must be bananas, right? Yeah, it is. It comes with this. It's goofiness, but also it comes with a lot of seriousness because wherever we go, we need to bring that same type of energy and influence and everything. Anybody that's ever seen a show in the past, they've all told their friends, this is what you should expect. And now we have to not only meet those expectations, but blow them out of the water, and that takes a certain gene quo that you don't just get from normal people. If someone were to come in and say, yeah, I'm looking for an eight to five job, you're like, get out of here.
(45:14):
This is not for you. You are going to work weekends, you are going to work late nights. You are going to work the most craziest schedule, but I can tell you at the end of the day, you are going to love what you have just accomplished. We have interns coming through here, and I was kind of joking with 'em the other day. They all laughed at my joke. I was like, yeah, this place is a meat grinder. And they're like, ha, ha, ha, ha. I was like, no, it really is a meat grinder, but if you survive this thing, you can go anywhere with this banana tattoo on your chest saying, I did that. I did that for three months. I know how to do this. And now it's becoming from an accounting, a nerdy accounting metaphor or assembly is that you go to the big four, so you could take your step and go to the next place. The bananas is our interns are coming in and then they're moving on to other places that maybe they weren't able to get to before, but now they got a giant foot in the door because the bananas are preparing them for greatness.
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (46:08):
I think that's great. So I know before we run out of time, I want to talk a little bit about the product itself that you have to show that you guys put on, because for baseball traditionalists, you might think, wait, what? Let's go on. One of my favourite rules that the bananas have, because whenever I would go to a ball game and I've gone to hundreds of major league games, I bring my glove, and I love the fact that if a player hits a foul ball into the stands and the fan catches the ball, the baters out. I love that idea. I talk about fan interaction. So for the audience here, tell everybody a little bit about some of the big rules. What differentiates banana ball from major League baseball?
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (46:51):
Well, I think the one, first and foremost is the two hour time clock. Baseball has suffered over the years as attention spans have grown shorter. The YouTube culture, I need the serotonin jabs. I need these things in 90 seconds or less. I need speed. I need something moving. And baseball has suffered because it is a long game. You have to really love baseball to want to watch an entire game of baseball. And again, this is not something where you think about every time you think about baseball, you think about you and your dad pouring peanuts into a Coke and drinking it in a fancy way that you used to do it. This is something where the new generations that are coming up, they're looking at all this stuff that's happening around them, and baseball is just not meeting that need. Now, what has baseball done?
(47:39):
Added a pitch clock, right? Okay, so that's sped up the game a little bit, which is great. In fact, I don't think it's hindered the game at all. Now, you don't have a guy just kind of dancing on the mound, but it's like, move the game along, guys. Come on, let's get the offence going. Right? Well, the two hour time clock allows us to move through the game in a way that people know that, hey, there's a finite time. This game's going to start at seven, it's going to end at nine. If it goes into showdown, it might end at nine 15, maybe nine 30, but if you're going to bring your kids in there, I would say most of our demo is the family of four, three and a half with two kids who are probably in the ages of anywhere between maybe six to maybe 13.
(48:21):
Those kids, when you as parents, you want to make sure that you go in and you leave at a nice time so you can get 'em home and get 'em to bed after they go off into banana land dreaming about backflips and funny things. So from a family perspective, it really does keep the game nice and tight, and I think that's one thing that fans really do enjoy. And by the way, some people would say, well, how do you get nine innings in? Actually, if we only get eight innings in, we go back and look at some of where did we stumble? What were things that we did, because we're trying to always get nine innings in that two hour time clock. The great thing is, is that because of the way the banana ball is based on a point system, which is one of the other things that are different, let's say the bananas get up or the bananas be home team.
(49:05):
Let's say the party animals get up and they drill 13 runs in the first inning and the bananas come up, they get one run, right? Well, it's not that this game's not over in normal baseball would be, it'd be 13 to one after the first inning, and you're looking at the going, okay, the party animals are going to win this one. 90% of it, they're going to win unless the bananas going to tear, right? But bananas are not on the night, whatever, but the party animals get one point, okay, so now flip the script party animals are up, they score zero points, and then the first guy out for the bananas hits a home run and gets that one run the inning's over. So the only time it took was for the party animals to go through three outs and the bananas to hit one home run.
(49:48):
Because under the point system, it doesn't matter how many runs you have, whoever has the most runs gets a point for that inning. In fact, it's created such an issue that we had to put on a new rule that allowed the visiting team, but again, doesn't have as much time on the field it gave them, if they do more trick plays than the home team, then come to the last inning. They get a point, which by the way, so it could be a three game, but at the end of the last inning when the last inning comes up, they now have a one point lead, a four three lead because they've done more trick plays. So it was a way to kind of equalise things because of the lack of the amount of time that the visitor team actually has on the field due to that very simple thing.
(50:43):
If you score zero and they get up and they score one run that inning's over, they don't have to pay three outs. Right. So that makes another one more fun ones is that foul ball into the stands certainly has to be a clean catch, right? Interestingly, we're talking about how competition's now starting to come out. It's the Red Ocean, blue Ocean Theory, right? Your blue ocean for a little while. You have about eight to 10 years before that becomes purple and then all of a sudden there's so many competitors in the water. It's red. Everybody's trying to vie for this. There are copycat leagues that are now coming into play, and in fact, just up the road here at I 16, they're called the Tri-City Chilli Peppers and the Tri-City Chilli Peppers. They actually made a rule to where any foul ball that's hit, anything that's hit off the bat into foul territory is actually playable. So now all of the fans become defensemen. So if you catch it, that's one thing. If it bounces, you can actually go get the ball and throw it back into the field so that now you are part of the play. That is a really cool rule. There was one that was on, I think it was on EPN. I'm I thinking of some
Host: Paul Barnhurst (51:50):
Liability issues coming up with that.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (51:53):
It's a cool rule. N-I-L-N-I-L all over the place. You're always thinking the good way, Paul. But yeah, so what you're seeing there is you're seeing people take advantage of, Hey, we have all these people who are in this room. How do we keep them all glued to the product on the field? That's a great one because that ball comes off and it's near you, an 8-year-old kid, you're going to chase that thing down. You're going to grab it and you're going to throw it back on the field because that ball is in play. That is cool.
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (52:19):
The 8-year-old who takes the ball, throws it and hits the back of the head of the person that's in front of them. Now you got to,
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (52:27):
I'm sure it's on the ticket that anything that flies out, you're going to get hit by something, right?
Host: Paul Barnhurst (52:31):
Oh, I'm sure. Yeah. All the disclaimers are on the ticket.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (52:33):
We
Host: Paul Barnhurst (52:33):
Know how that works. Well, and any more questions from you, Glen? I think we're kind of coming up on about hours, so I'll let you see if you have any others.
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (52:42):
I mean, I could go on for multiple hours just talking about baseball as you know. But No, I guess Tim, it's always great and I love, one of the big things is that I think banana ball, it's sometimes it's a little harder to watch for a baseball traditionalist and it's growing on me. It is growing, but what I love is that there are a bunch of people who had no interest in baseball before who are not like, oh, I love watching the bananas on TV when they're on ESPN or whatever, and I think it just brings more people to the sport and gets more fans engaged in baseball all around, which I think it's a fantastic thing. So absolutely loved what you guys are doing, and it's just, hey, that's the idea that the XFL did the same thing to the NFL. It wasn't that they're saying the NFL was with a bad product. You're just saying, Hey, you know what? We're going to do things a little different. I mean, right. The guy who all back with Jersey with he hate me or whatever. Still you got to remove that. I
Host: Paul Barnhurst (53:33):
Still remember that one.
Co-Host: Glenn Snyder (53:36):
The thing is, is that the NFL Chase very changing some of their rules to adapt to the XFL, especially when the XFL went away and you're seeing Major League baseball do. So I think what you guys are doing, it's great challenge the norms and it's just a lot of fun and so I think fantastic job.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (53:51):
Well, coming from a baseball traditionalist, I appreciate those sentiments. Thank you.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (53:54):
It's fun to watch. I think competition is always good when you challenge the norms change sports, we've seen it in football. We see different things in all kinds of sports that change things and love what you're doing there. Love the entertainment. The baseball's a fun episode, and I hope everybody enjoyed getting to see insight beyond just the financials, but how a league operates is so different than our traditional US sports leads, right? It's a whole different model. So really appreciate you walking us through that and sharing a lot of those intricacies with us, Tim, and before we end, any last words, last thoughts you want to give us? Any advice for the FP&A people out there, or any good wisdom? You can take it wherever you want.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (54:42):
I just want you guys to pick a side. Are you accountants or are you finance people? What is it?
Host: Paul Barnhurst (54:46):
I'm a finance person. There's no accountant. Plenty. No question.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (54:50):
It's like sharks and jets out there, guys. I just want us all to get along, but it's like, alright,
Host: Paul Barnhurst (54:54):
Well real quick, Tim, I have to say one thing now that you brought it up, do you know what the difference is between an accountant and an FP&A professional?
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (55:01):
Oh, here it comes. Charisma.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (55:04):
No, when an accountant gets creative, they go to jail. When an FP&A professional gets creative, they get promoted. That's why I work in FP&A.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (55:13):
Okay. It's time for me to move to the FP&A world. No, I've appreciated being on with you guys. Obviously, it's always a good time talking about not just banana ball, but just talking with people in the finance world. I appreciate you guys allowing me to come into your world and share a little bit about what I'm excited about and certainly if you really do want a page turner as soon to be movie writers and you guys, I'll start the bidding at like three bucks. We'll get Chris Noble of Odyssey, fame and Interstellar to come and do the, it's going to be great. We'll get Ben Affleck to come back in for account three. I'll bid 2 79
Host: Paul Barnhurst (55:44):
Where
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (55:45):
Two,
Host: Paul Barnhurst (55:48):
I'm a discount guy.
Guest: Dr. Tim Naddy (55:50):
It sounds like, it sounds like you're, let's take the FP&A out on it. Let, we'll just scrap that there. Hey, I really appreciate you guys. Thank you so much for having me on.
Host: Paul Barnhurst (55:59):
Yeah, thank you for joining us.That's it for today's episode of FP&A Unlocked. If you enjoy FP&A unlocked, please take a moment to leave a five-star rating and review. It's the best way to support the FP&A guy and help more FP&A professionals discover the show. Remember, you can earn CPE credit for this episode by visiting earmarkcpe.com. Downloading the app and completing the quiz. If you need continuing education credits for the FPAC certification, complete the quiz and reach out to me directly. Thanks for listening. I'm Paul Barnhurst, the FP&A guy, and I'll see you next time.