
The Corporate Collapse Pattern
How Great Companies Destroy Themselves (Book 2)
By Shane Larson · The Collapse Pattern (Book 2)
About This Book
Kodak invented digital photography. Then digital photography killed Kodak.
Blockbuster turned down the chance to buy Netflix for $50 million. Enron was named America's Most Innovative Company six years running — while committing one of the largest frauds in corporate history. Nokia controlled 40% of the global mobile phone market and dismissed the iPhone as a toy. Theranos fooled a board of generals, senators, and billionaires for over a decade. WeWork's $47 billion valuation evaporated in weeks.
These aren't stories about bad companies. They're stories about great companies — dominant, admired, and apparently invincible — that destroyed themselves through a pattern so consistent it borders on mechanical.
The Corporate Collapse Pattern examines history's most dramatic business failures to map the recurring dynamics that appear when great companies come apart. Not management theory. Not business school retrospectives. A clear-eyed, evidence-driven look at the structural forces that turn market leadership into catastrophic failure — and a practical framework for recognizing them before the obituary is written.
What you'll discover:
- Why success is the most dangerous thing that can happen to a company — and how dominance plants the seeds of collapse
- How the same cycle of hubris, denial, and death spiral plays out across industries, eras, and business models
- The seven warning signs that appeared before every collapse — and the organizational dynamics that ensured they were ignored
- Why corporate boards almost never save failing companies, even when the evidence is right in front of them
- How Theranos maintained a $9 billion valuation and WeWork lost $47 billion in weeks — and what both reveal about the same underlying failure mode
- What the companies that survived their near-death experiences — Microsoft, Apple, IBM — did differently from the ones that didn't
Case studies include: Kodak, Blockbuster, Nokia, Enron, Theranos, WeWork, Sears, Silicon Valley Bank, and Lehman Brothers.
Includes a Corporate Collapse Warning Signs Checklist you can apply to any organization, a timeline of major corporate collapses, and a curated further reading list.
Book 2 in The Collapse Pattern Series, from the author of The Collapse Pattern: How Great Civilizations Destroy Themselves.
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