Why Good Companies Go Bad (And How to Stop It)
Eric Ries, the author who taught a generation how to build with «The Lean Startup», is back with a provocative challenge: getting to product-market fit isn't enough. The more successful your company becomes, the more valuable it is as a target—for takeover, for extraction, for mission drift. Founders everywhere are losing control of the companies they built, not because they failed, but precisely because they succeeded. How do you protect what you've created when every incentive in the modern economy rewards short-term value capture over long-term value creation?
Kernaussagen
Shareholder primacy—the idea that companies exist only to maximize returns—is not a law of nature or capitalism. It dates to the 1980s, has never been put to a vote, and the evidence shows it actively destroys long-term value.
Converting to a Public Benefit Corporation (PBC) is the single easiest, highest-impact governance decision a founder can make. It's a two-page filing that restores purposeful incorporation and shields you from being forced to sell to the highest bidder.
Dual-class voting shares provide temporary protection, but they expire, get defeated, or disappear when the founder dies. Without a structural successor—like an industrial foundation or long-term benefit trust—your mission dies with your control.
Independent directors are not your friends. They have no financial stake in your mission and strong career incentives to stay aligned with investors. The best practice of board independence is actually a best practice for investor control.
Companies with industrial foundation structures—where nonprofit trustees appoint for-profit directors—are six times more likely to survive to year 50 (60% vs. 10%). Long-term structures create long-term value.
Kurzgesagt
Founder control isn't enough and investor control is actively value-destroying. The solution is mission-controlled companies with governance structures strong enough to protect their core purpose for decades—and the tools to build them have existed for over a century.
The Trap of Success
The more successful your company, the more valuable it becomes as a target.
Eric Ries opens with a hard truth: success doesn't protect you—it paints a target on your back. The «professor», a founder building transformative AI biotech, carefully curated his team around trust and mission alignment. Yet when investors heard his concerns about misuse, they dismissed him with condescension: «Don't worry about it. If you're serious about business, this isn't what you should focus on.» Meanwhile, Ries was on his way to memorialize a founder who had created billions in value for investors—and been betrayed and removed at the first opportunity.
The wake wasn't for a dead person or a dead company. It was for something harder to name: the loss of a mission guardian. A thousand people flew in at their own expense, including those who'd been laid off, to mourn what the company had been. The new CEO was competent, even likable, but his promises were conditional on investor approval. The company had become what Ries calls a «temporary organization led by temporary managers on behalf of temporary investors.» Average stock holding periods, company lifespans, and executive tenures have all collapsed—and trust has collapsed with them.
The Shareholder Primacy Myth
The law requiring profit maximization isn't actually a law at all.
The Shareholder Primacy Myth
Shareholder primacy—the doctrine that companies must maximize returns above all else—has never been subject to a vote, legislative action, or democratic process. It emerged in the 1980s from a small group of academics and judges who reinterpreted «any lawful activity» to mean «shareholder value.» Legal scholars now write tortured papers distinguishing «legal obligation» from «legal duty» to explain why courts enforce a rule that isn't technically law. Yet founders lose lawsuits, get fired, and are forced to sell based on this phantom doctrine every day.
The Saul Price Playbook
A fiduciary duty to customers, not shareholders, built Costco.
Define your client Saul Price, a lawyer-turned-retailer, asked a simple question: who is my client? He chose customers first, employees second, shareholders third—a fiduciary hierarchy that became the foundation of FedMart and later Price Club (Costco).
Put principle above profit Price would post signs in his own stores directing customers to competitors if they offered lower prices. He understood that trust is an asset and that people will drive miles out of their way to shop somewhere they believe is truly on their side.
Lose control, lose the mission In 1975, Price's board changed the locks on his office. He was fired. The company that took him 20 years to build was bankrupt within seven years under «best practice» management focused on higher prices, lower wages, and faster growth.
Build again with protection Price took two weeks off, leased the office above FedMart, and started Price Club with governance structures designed to protect the mission. That company merged with a spinoff led by a former FedMart stock boy to become Costco—still embodying Price's fiduciary hierarchy today.
Governance Tools Founders Don't Know Exist
How Novo Nordisk Created $500 Billion by Saying No
Nonprofit trustees blocked a merger everyone wanted—and saved GLP-1.
In the early 2000s, Novo Nordisk's for-profit board and independent directors agreed the company needed to merge. It was the new best practice in pharma: «eat or be eaten.» They found a buyer, negotiated a $20 billion deal at a huge premium, and brought the signed agreement to the nonprofit foundation trustees for the final rubber stamp. The trustees asked a simple question: «What problem are we solving?» Novo had been profitable for 10 consecutive years, growing 20% annually. The board's answer—«it's necessary for survival»—didn't hold up.
The trustees said no. The merger collapsed. Bankers, investors, and executives were furious. Two years later, the acquirer was itself bought by Merck—and all of Novo's major R&D programs would have been cancelled, including a program in year 11 of 13 with no evidence it would work: GLP-1. Because the trustees held the line, the research continued. Twenty years later, Novo Nordisk's market cap briefly exceeded the GDP of Denmark. The delta between the merger price and the eventual valuation? More than $500 billion in value created by saying no to short-term pressure.
Why Anthropic Can Say No to $200 Million
A long-term benefit trust gives the AI lab structural courage.
The Builder's Birthright
Reclaim the right to build companies that create more value than they capture.
“The best way to make money is to create more value than you capture. And yet, we're all supposed to pretend these days that we think all kinds of making money is equally good. There's so many ways of making money in our economy today where you can get rich without creating any value at all. And I just think, why don't we just stop pretending that we think that's good?”
Key Numbers
The data shows best practices destroy value and mission structures create it.
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