All posts

What I Learned While Diving in the Maldives About Seeing What Really Matters in Costs

authors

No items found.
No items found.

Content

I'm going to be the URL to copy

What I learned while diving in the Maldives about seeing what really matters in costs
  • What I Learned While Diving in the Maldives About Seeing What Really Matters in CostsThere are trips you remember for what you see on the surface, and others you remember for what you only understand once you go underwater.

This was one of those.

I went to the Maldives over twenty years ago, as part of a promotion for a new flight route when I was working at a travel agency.

We stayed in a simple beachfront cottage, with no air conditioning and very little luxury. Nothing like what you see in today’s Maldives travel brochures.

And maybe I haven’t told you that whenever I can, when the location allows it, I go scuba diving. My father taught me to dive, and it’s something I love to do at any destination with an ocean.

For me, it’s not just about seeing beautiful things. It’s a way of being.

The sound of the sea from within, the currents, the fish, the corals, that feeling of weightlessness. It’s a way to silence the mental noise.

And over time, diving teaches you something very important: what’s essential is almost never in plain sight.

It’s exactly the same with costs in companies.

The same is true for business costs.

  • A country’s most valuable assets aren’t always on the surface.If you’ve been reading my work for a while, you might know that when I travel, I have a few non-negotiables.

If I can, I walk through the woods or the jungle, climb a mountain,...

And always, always, I go to the markets and eat where the locals eat.

I’m not so much interested in restaurants as I am in understanding how real life unfolds.

And also, as I’m telling you today, I go scuba diving.

The Maldives, from above, is already spectacular: turquoise water, perfect beaches, almost like an idyllic postcard.

But that’s just the surface.

What you can’t see is the most impressive part.

And on that trip, there was a moment that has stayed with me forever.

I’ve always been more interested in understanding what makes a place what it is than in what you see in photos.

  • Waiting in silence for what matters to appearOne day we went to watch the manta rays feed.

There are areas where krill congregate in large numbers, and the manta rays always arrive at roughly the same time.

We descended to the bottom of the sea and stayed there, kneeling, waiting.

You don’t do anything; you just wait.

And then they appear.

And then they appear.

Majestic, enormous, elegant, gliding gracefully over you as if they were flying.

They open their mouths, feed, passing so close that you can almost feel the movement of the water.

And there, beneath the water, you understand something very simple:

The world is so much bigger than your day-to-day life.

That working, rushing around, and putting out fires isn’t everything.

That there are invisible structures, natural rhythms, and balances that can’t be seen from above.

None of that is obvious unless you go deep enough.

  • The same thing happens with costs in large companies.Most organizations manage their costs like tourists visiting the Maldives from the shore: focusing on what’s obvious.

In companies, this means:

  • Budgets.
  • Major expense items.
  • Visible variances.
  • That’s just the surface.
  • But what truly determines a company’s financial health lies beneath.
  • In processes that no one reviews because “they’ve always worked.”
  • In decisions that are repeated out of habit.
  • In structures designed for a context that no longer exists.
  • And since they don’t make a fuss, they don’t bother anyone.
  • Since they aren’t spectacular, they aren’t prioritized.
  • And that’s why they’re harder to see.
  • Just like underwater, what’s important doesn’t usually stand out.
What I learned while diving in the Maldives about seeing what really matters in costs
  • Optimizing costs means looking beneath the sea

When I talk to CEOs and CFOs, I often encounter the same situation.

They believe they already know their costs because they review them every month.

And they certainly have a lot of information and know their numbers well.

But sometimes time robs us of the ability to analyze in depth.

Just like in diving, costs aren’t about just glancing at them.

They’re about observing, understanding the currents, respecting the timing, and knowing where to position yourself.

Because what matters most isn’t usually what stands out the most, but what sustains the system without anyone noticing.

And that requires diving down more than once.

  • The schools won’t appear if you make noise.If you move too much, stir up sediment, or don’t respect the environment, the schools won’t appear.

Something similar happens with costs.

When a company enters crisis mode, the first thing it does is:

  • cut visible expenses;
  • optimize costs without in-depth analysis;
  • make quick decisions that have an immediate impact.
  • And these actions, if well thought out, can work.
  • But often the problem runs deeper than that.
  • And that’s what’s often hard to see if you don’t have an outside perspective on the whole picture.
  • Not everything that matters responds well to noise.
  • Companies that optimize well know how to wait and observe.Organizations that excel at cost optimization aren’t the most reactive ones, but rather the most patient and systematic ones.

They know:

  • where to position themselves;
  • when to intervene;
  • what to let go.
  • They understand that some costs are like blankets: you don’t see them every day, but once you understand them, they change your entire perspective on the business.
  • And that only happens when you go deep enough.
  • But going deep takes time, involves discomfort, and leads to conclusions we sometimes don’t expect.
  • It’s much easier to stay up top, look at the crystal-clear water, and say that everything is fine.
  • But just like in the Maldives, the most valuable thing wasn’t in the cabin or on the beach.
  • It was down below, in silence, waiting for someone to take the time to look.
  • Up above there is apparent clarity; down below, true insight.
  • If you start going down now, the results will come later.Cost optimization doesn’t produce immediate fireworks.

It provides solidity.

If you start today:

  • you gain a better understanding of your actual structure;
  • you identify levers that aren’t obvious;
  • you make decisions based on sound judgment, not urgency.
  • And then the impact comes.
  • In a cost optimization project, the first results don’t appear within the first month; they usually take around 100 days, and an entire project lasts about three years to ensure it’s sustainable over time.
  • It’s like diving: what matters isn’t the exact moment the manta rays appear, but everything you’ve done beforehand to be in the right place when they arrive.
  • Preparation always comes before the result.
  • What I took away from the Maldives and am bringing to your companyThat trip reminded me of something I never forget when working with large companies:

Cost optimization isn’t just about looking at the big numbers; it’s about digging deeper to see what truly sustains the system.

Look deeper.

Beyond what is visible.

Beyond the immediate.

Because, just like in the Maldives, the most valuable thing wasn’t in the cabin or on the beach.

It was underneath, in silence, waiting for someone to take the time to look.

If you want to talk about how to dig deeper into your company’s cost structure to see what lies beneath, just drop me a line.

Thanks for reading.

𝗙𝗲𝗹𝗶𝘇 𝗱í𝗮.

Related articles

You might also like

News

ERA Group highlights four measures for companies to increase efficiency and resilience through water optimization

News

Your "Just-in-Time" strategy is dead

News

FX in LATAM

News

The Strategic Overlooked: The Potential of Indirect Costs

News

Review of cost structures

News

Your 2026 margin

News

The profit margin

News

Cost optimization and talent development are key factors in 2026

News

The clock moved but didn't stop

News

The lack of visibility goes unnoticed until it hurts

News

ERA Group offers 10 tips for optimizing costs in your franchise in an international landscape full of uncertainties

News

The ERA team participates in CPONet 2025

News

AI Strategy in Procurement: Practical Webinar Series for Decision-Makers

News

Generative AI in Palibex’s expense management during the iFAES event

News

Optimizing for a normal day won’t save you on a critical day

News

The Spanish food industry is exercising caution in the face of new tariff threats between the US and the EU

News

The Spanish logistics sector

News

Interview with our new partner: Arthur Dobma

News

Emergencies That Turn Into Budget

News

Operar Agroindustria

News

What happens if we “flip” the EBITDA?

News

RIGI: the new language of investing

News

The CFO’s Closet: When You Have Everything, But Nothing Goes Together

News

Want to dominate 2026?

News

If your checkout depends on an Excel file, you’re at risk

News

Saving is fine, but...

News

Everything is connected in logistics and distribution

News

Bank fees don’t take a vacation

News

Awkward Moments for CEOs/CFOs

News

Greater financial sustainability for prestigious Chilean sports institution

News

A cross-disciplinary perspective on finance and sustainability

News

The sea is the same for everyone; what changes is who is at the helm

News

Eight trends for 2026: prices, passion, and the risks ahead

News

2025 at a Glance: Costs, Complexity, and the Road to 2026

News

Romnes AS enters into a cooperation agreement with ERA Group regarding cost analysis

News

Taking Advantage of the Summer Downtime⁣

News

Your Company’s Special Calendar: Why Managing Costs Means Managing Time.

News

Saving in Practice

News

Investment in AI

News

The uncomfortable truth about profitability

News

Will your brand survive, or will it win?

News

ERA Group identifies ten keys to building supply chains ready for a constantly changing world

News

The Hidden Cost of Paying “the Way We’ve Always Done It”

News

Tax structure optimized for large contracts

News

Holding on to what matters when everything around you changes

News

The Value of Specialization: Our Secret at ERA Group

News

Draft Bill on Mining Suppliers in San Juan

News

Spanish investors have doubled their investment in oil and gas since the start of the war with Iran

News

You can’t prevent an earthquake. But you can prepare your cost structure.

News

Manuel Velázquez contributes to El Debate in his February article on energy

News

World Logistics Day: Why Companies Can No Longer Afford Reactive Logistics

News

Energy: The cost isn’t just in the kWh.

News

New video testimonial with Jordi Romero, CEO of Schmitz Cargobull Ibérica S.A.

News

Compliance without suffering

News

How Your Company Closed in 2025

News

Your margin is slipping away in "little details"

News

A clear view of your company's actual cash flow

News

The cost no one wants to touch

News

Generate real savings without laying off anyone

News

A New Economic Dawn

News

The delay isn’t the problem. The problem is how you use that time.

News

80% of savings aren’t where we usually look for them: how a CFO thinks when profits fall

News

Microsoft is adjusting prices in 2026. The most interesting part isn’t the price hike.

News

Sustainability is not an expense but a source of savings and leadership

News

The impact of tariffs on geopolitics and the foundry industry is in the planning

News

The day the electricity also started showing “out of power”

News

Optimizing energy use is like carrying an adapter

News

ERA Group identifies four key challenges forcing professional services firms to act with urgency

News

ERA Group appoints Marcel Lal as new Global Chief Development Officer to drive its international growth

News

What the Incas Taught Me About Keeping Costs in Check at a Large Company

News

The rail freight sector calls for more competitive, sustainable logistics that are connected to Europe

News

What December Tells You About Your Business

News

Sponsorship of the Markham Interhouse Golf Tournament

News

Running a business is like playing chess

News

How Much Is Your Company Losing in MRO Management

News

The Rise of Streaming

News

Your company is a link in the supply chain

News

When the trip is well planned, the work involved in purchasing is barely noticeable

News

The conflict in Iran affects fixed electricity and gas rates

News

5 Supply Chain Management Trends to Watch in 2026

News

The "just in case" scenario that ends up costing a lot

News

Shoemaker, make your own shoes

News

The Goal of the Implementation

News

Without cost management, there is no sustainable impact

News

Tariffs, Geopolitics, and Smelting: Why the Real Impact Isn’t in the Price, but in Planning

News

Outsourcing: The Cost That Grows on Its Own

News

When the retail boom has already landed, but the cost journey continues to take its toll

News

From Apparent Stability to Risk Management: What Energy and Transportation Companies Must Learn Ahead of 2026

News

Is your company sustainable by conviction or just on paper?

News

The problem isn't the analysis

News

Detect hidden charges on electricity bills

News

From Reactive Control to a Forward-Looking Strategy

News

Strategic Expansion of Executive Leadership: ERA Group DACH Strengthens Marketing and Franchise Recruitment

News

ERA Insights Newsletter 01/26 - Strategic Procurement

News

Webinar summary: "The hidden costs of temporary work"

News

Webinar with Dominique Seux: his presentation in 6 key points

News

ERA Netherlands Country Manager - Theo Bouwmans - speaks with FranchisePlus Magazine

News

Robotic process automation in the time of COVID-19

News

The hotel industry is growing; with significant reserves in conference tourism

News

Construction slows down; inflation rises. Are you ready for a recession?

Get insights that drive your business

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.