Article from Entrepreneur
Forever, by Felco Armanias
After
my article last issue about the healing, holistic, and productive
effects of consuming Tofu, I thought I would turn my attention to
some of the more ingenious business ideas that are cropping up all
over the place in our current economy.
These
are regular small business owners, who, faced with a difficult
economy and low sales, have improvised to come out on top.
What
follows is my interview with one of these business owners: Layne
Huber, owner of a small graphic design company called HuberGraphics,
based out of Calgary, Canada.
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Felco:
Good morning, and thank you so much for being willing to allow me
this interview.
Layne:
Hey, no problem. I've read your work before, and I'm happy to help
out the small business community in any way I can.
Felco:
That's great, and believe me, we all appreciate your attitude. Now,
why don't you tell us about this concept of Clone Outsourcing and
about its inspiration?
Layne:
Well, it was simple really. My company is a sole proprietorship,
and while I had a fair amount of work, and the taxes weren't bad, it
was still hard to stay on top of everything, and actually move
forward as a company. You have to balance development with cash
right?
Anyway,
I was thinking about how to make it all jive, and that I couldn't
really afford to outsource the work, when I saw this ad from the
local high school advertising their new cloning program, and it just
kinda hit me: Why not clone myself, and get the extra help I needed?
Imagine how easy it would be to have a helpers who thought along the
same lines as I did, but would be able to concentrate on different
areas.
Felco:
Wow, I'm impressed! It's takes a certain kind of person to come up
with such a concept.
Layne:
Thanks.
Felco:
So, how many of them are you?
Layne:
Five. No, wait . . . Six. Yeah, six of us.
Felco:
That's quite a group. How do you differentiate between each of you?
Layne:
I admit that that was one thing I hadn't really considered ahead of
time. And it took some time to get used to. At first we tried using
Superhero names, but that idea wasn't really viable, as everyone
wanted to be Batman or Wolverine, and nobody would really settle for
Superman or Robin. So instead we kind of just took arbritrary names
according to what our focus was in the company.
So,
to my right we have Sparky, who is our computer tech guy. . .
Sparky:
Yo.
Layne:
Monk, Short for Code Monkey, as he works on all our websites.
Monk:
Hey.
Layne:
English, our writer, and proof-reader.
English:
How do you do.
Layne:
Then Graphite, our artist, and finally Sahib.
Felco:
Sahib? I thought that their names all refered to a certain area in
your company.
Layne:
Oh, Sahib is in charge of our customer service. Answers the phone
mainly.
Felco:
I see. But how do you tell each other apart?
Layne:
Clothes mostly. We all try to wear something different, and then we
have different variations in hair, as well as facial hair. Graphite
here has more of a pencil shape soul patch. English is clean shaven,
and Sahib has a mustache.
Felco:
I see. But as far as I can see, there are only five clones. You said
there was a sixth?
Layne:
Oh yeah. Him. We don't like to talk about him. He hit it big in a
Ponzi Scheme and ended up a millionaire. Left soon after. He was
always a bit of a jerk really.
Felco:
Ah. Well, I can easily think how this set up would be greatly
advantageous. Are there any disadvantages to cloning yourself six
times?
Layne:
Well, as it turns out, it's a bit illegal and for two reasons:
Firstly,
there is some debate about the moral implications of cloning itself.
And while it's outlawed in Canada, I personally don't think it's
really a problem, as I'm cloning myself. Maybe if it was a cow or
sheep or something. Though I wouldn't feel bad about the sheep
really. I hate sheep.
And
secondly because, as clones, they don't have birth certificates.
Only these little tags here that say: "Property of Higgleton
High" but for some reason the government won't take them as ID.
That means that I'm the only one who has a Social Insurance Number,
and thus can legally work. So what we have to do instead, is do it
all under the pretense that it's only the one of us that's doing the
work.
Therefore
we only have one private email address, and have to try to keep track
of each others vocabulary and whatnot. If Sahib is going to be using
the word "Insepid" a lot, than he has to write it down in
a Google Document, which we then all read every week and sync our
vocabularies. It also makes relationships difficult, as we can't be
more than one person, and thus have to tell each other as much as
possible about each day as we can, so we know how to react to
circumstances, or conversations we end up in. Usually though, if we
make a mistake and repeat something that one of us said the day
before, we can just blame a bad memory. Works great.
Felco:
Now, what about the possible consequences of making clones of
yourself. It seems like in everything I've ever heard or seen, the
clones always end up evil and twisted. Does this worry you at all?
Are you afraid that one of them might kill you in your sleep and take
your place?
Layne:
Ha ha! No no, of course not. These fellows are like my brothers.
They wouldn't hurt a fly, and they definitely wouldn't hurt me.
We're like a hockey team almost, just we run a small business. And
of course they don't eat kittens. You can't believe everything you
hear.
Felco:
Glad to hear it. That puts my mind at ease. I just have one last
question. If this cloning outsourcing plan is illegal, aren't you
worried about going public with it? Won't you run into some serious
backlash?
Layne:
Well, originally, Layne wanted the plan to be that we . . .
Felco:
Wait. I thought you said you were Layne.
Clone:
. . .
Felco:
. . .
Clone:
You don't understand! He was keeping us under wraps! Do you have
any idea how hard it is to feed six people one person's serving of
dessert? We had to go public! He was holding us back from tremendous
destinies! We had to . . .
Felco:
I think this interview is over.
*** Disclaimer***
Despite the nature of this article, I, the author, do not agree with cloning Humans, and never have participated in any way. I also do not condone the murder of someone else in order to achieve success.