Helping with Adventurer Party Management

Episode 533: Can't Other Businesses

Why did you consider the flour milling industry as the main industry in your territory?

As far as I'm concerned, I thought it was an inevitable flow, but if it doesn't look that way from the others, it would mean it's not organized.

"Right... first of all, I wanted to enrich the territory by taking on deputies. I wanted the territory to be enriched and the people to have a good life. So I didn't want to be excited about a job where only some people, like gold lenders, could make money."

If we are going to make the investment industry work, I am confident that I will make money clarity.

With regard to the knowledge of the financial system, there is a great difference between this world and the original world, and there is no difficulty in taking it up if the power of the Church is put in the background.

But I didn't like it.

If we run large sums of money, we will have more relations with the upper ecclesiastical and grand aristocracy than we do now, and where my financial assets have increased, the total amount of wealth in this entire world will not increase, nor will it make life easier for adventurers and peasants.

"I see. The deputy certainly doesn't look like a gold-loan."

"Well, I know it's frigid, but it's not that direction."

and other new officials say rude things.

"Then why didn't you think to add more fields? More work for farmers."

"More farmland doesn't make farmers richer"

I assure you there. There is a threat of monsters in this world, and expanding agricultural land raises defence costs.

The new fields yield less because the soil is poorly maintained.

Besides, there is a limited area that can be cultivated by one person because it is an agriculture that is not mechanized.

"I mean, more poor farmers, even if they spend to expand their farmland"

Indeed, more people work in agriculture, and on a ten-year basis, rural areas have the potential to become richer.

But the time period I've been given is a few years at best.

"So expanding farmland is not an option"

I assure you, this is mostly a voice of admiration and doubt.

"Sure, if you ask me, you will"

"But many nobles and churches are expanding their farmland until they borrow funds..."

The whole kingdom is now boiling down in an unprecedented land development boom, either from the influence of reports from the Adventurer's Guild to the kingdom and the upper ecclesiastical levels.

I guess that's inconsistent with the situation.

"Things are different in aristocratic territory and in the deputies I have undertaken. The nobles think of it on a 100-year basis. As a nobleman, if slowly but surely the wealth of the entire territory increases, that is fine. I don't care about the income per farmer."

Shall I say the difference between owner president and hired manager?

As an unsustainable deputy, you can't come to territorial development on the same mound as a nobleman who can.

"So there was no way to expand the business of shoes? Now if we move the workshop in the city to the territory, we can scale it up..."

It would be an honest strategy to honestly expand what is working right now.

Although the production of Adventurer's shoes continues to increase, we are still unable to provide as many as the market demands, and the situation continues to be that they are shipped from the side where they are created.

Shouldn't we be able to scale it up more? That would be the situation of the shoe business as the surrounding area thinks.

"The shoe business will not go well. As a major premise, even if you built a shoe factory because the territory will only be kept for a few years as a deputy, you have to withdraw. If you want to build and retreat, you better not build from the beginning."

"You can't just leave the shoe factory like that..."

"I don't want you doing the shoe business out of my sight"

The manufacture of Adventurer's shoes is laborious.

It sends it out to the world at a price that is available for purchase to adventurers with improved manufacturing processes and quality control mechanisms.

It is visible to create high prices, low quality shoes in a few years if we simply leave it to people who do not understand the management methods to build and leave the workshop alone.

If a shoe like that were to take the life of an adventurer, I wouldn't be able to forgive myself.

"And I'm not the only one in the shoe business. Jilboa would have disagreed, too."

"It's hard stuff..."

In the process of thinking about why it is a flour mill, it seemed that the new officials had noticed the difficulty as well, as they put it into words as to why it could not be done in other businesses.