The Stupidest Business Decisions in History

The following is from Uncle John's All-Purpose Extra Strength Bathroom Reader.

We've all made mistakes ... but probably not big mistakes like making snot beer, saying no to The Beatles, or turning down the patent for the telephone. In fact, here are some of the biggest business blunders in history:

Turning Down The Beatles

SHOULD WE SIGN THEM UP? The Beatles on Ed Sullivan Show in 1964 (Source: Wikipedia)  

Executives: Mike Smith and Dick Rowe, executives in charge of evaluating new talent for the London office of Decca Records.

Background: On December 13, 1961, Mike Smith traveled to Liverpool to watch a local rock 'n' roll band perform. He decided they had talent, and invited them to audition on New Year's Day 1962. The group made the trip to London and spent two hours playing 15 different songs at the Decca studios. Then they went home and waited for an answer. They waited for weeks.

Decision: Finally, Rowe told the band's manager that the label wasn't interested, because they sounded too much like a popular group called The Shadows. In one of the most famous of all rejection lines, he said: "Not to mince words, Mr. Epstein, but we don't like your boys' sound. Groups are out; four-piece groups with guitars particularly are finished."

Impact: The group was The Beatles, of course. They eventually signed with EMI Records, started a trend back to guitar bands, and ultimately became the most popular band of all time. Ironically, "within two years, EMI's production facilities became so stretched that Decca helped them out in a reciprocal arrangement, to cope with the unprecedented demand for Beatles records."

Turning Down E.T.

SHOULD WE LET THAT DIRECTOR USE OUR CANDY IN HIS FILM?

Executives: John and Forrest Mars, the owners of Mars Inc., makers of M&M's

Background: In 1981, Universal Studios called Mars and asked for permission to use M&M's in a new film they were making. This was (and is) a fairly common practice. Product placement deals provide filmmakers with some extra cash or promotion opportunities. In this case, the director was looking for a cross-promotion. He'd use the M&M's, and Mars could help promote the movie.

Decision: The Mars brothers said "No."

Impact: The film was E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, directed by Stephen Spielberg. The M&M's were needed for a crucial scene: Eliott, the little boy who befriended the alien, uses candies to lure E.T. into his house. Instead, Universal Studios went to Hershey's and cut a deal to use a new product called Reese's Pieces. Initial sales of Reese's Pieces had been light. But when E.T. became a top-grossing film - generating tremendous publicity for "E.T.'s favorite candy" - sales exploded. They tripled within two weeks and continued climbing for months afterward. "It was the biggest marketing coup in history," says Jack Dowd, the Hershey's executive who approved the movie tie-in. "We got immediate recognition for our product. We would normally have to pay 15 or 20 million bucks for it."

Selling M*A*S*H For Peanuts

HOW DO WE COME UP WITH SOME QUICK CASH?

Executives: Executives of 20th Century Fox's TV division (pre-Murdoch)

Background: No one at Fox expected much from M*A*S*H when it debuted on TV in 1972. Execs simply wanted to make a cheap series by using the M*A*S*H movie set again - so it was a surprise when it became Fox's only hit show. Three years later, the company was hard up for cash. When the M*A*S*H ratings started to slip after two of its stars left, Fox execs panicked.

Decision: They decided to raise cash by selling the syndication rights to the first seven seasons of M*A*S*H on a futures basis: local TV stations could pay in 1975 for shows they couldn't broadcast until October 1979 - four years away. Fox made no guarantees that the should would still be popular; $13,000 per episodes was non-refundable. But enough local stations took the deal so that Fox made $25 million. They celebrated ...

Impact: ... but prematurely. When M*A*S*H finally aired in syndication in 1979, it was still popular (in fact, it ranked #3 that year). It became one of the most successful syndicated shows ever, second only to "I Love Lucy." Each of the original 168 episodes grossed over $1 million for local TV stations; Fox got nothing.

What Use is the Telephone, the Electrical Toy?

SHOULD WE BUY THIS INVENTION?

Executive: William Orton, president of the Western Union Telegraph Company in 1876.

Background: In 1876, Western Union had a monopoly on the telegraph, the world's most advanced communications technology. This made it one of America's richest and most powerful companies, "with $41 million in capital and the pocketbooks of the financial world behind it." So when Gardiner Greene Hubbard, a wealthy Bostonian, approached Orton with an offer to sell the patent for a new invention Hubbard had helped to fund, Orton treated it as a joke. Hubbard was asking for $100,000!

Decision: Orton bypassed Hubbard and drafted a response directly to the inventor. "Mr. Bell," he wrote, "after careful consideration of your invention, while it is a very interesting novelty, we have come to the conclusion that it has no commercial possibilities... What use could this company make of an electrical toy?"

Impact: The invention, the telephone, would have been perfect for Western Union. The company had a nationwide network of telegraph wires in place, and the inventor, 29-year-old Alexander Graham Bell, had shown that his telephone worked quite well on telegraph lines. All the company had to do was hook telephones up to its existing lines and it would have had the world's first nationwide telephone network in a matter of months. Instead, Bell kept the patent and in a few decades his telephone company, "renamed American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T), had become the largest corporation in America ... The Bell patent - offered to Orton for a measly $100,000 - became the single most valuable patent in history." Ironically, less than two years of turning Bell down, Orton realized the magnitude of his mistake and spent millions of dollars challenging Bell's patents while attempting to build his own telephone network (which he was ultimate forced to hand over to Bell.) Instead of going down in history as one of the architects of the telephone age, he is instead remember for having made one of the worst decisions in American business history.

Let's Make Snot Beer!

HOW DO WE COMPETE WITH BUDWEISER?

Executive: Robert Uihlein, Jr., head of the Schlitz Brewing Company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Background: in the 1970s, Schlitz was America's #2 beer, behind Budweiser. It had been #1 until 1957 and has pursued Bud ever since. In the 1970s, Uihlein came up with a strategy to compete against Anheuser-Busch. He figured that if he could cut the cost of ingredients used in his beer and speed up the brewing process at the same time, he could brew more beer in the same amount of time for less money ... and earn higher profits.

Decision: Uihlein cut the amount of time it took to brew Schlitz from 40 days to 15, and replaced much of the barley malt in the beer with corn syrup - which was cheaper. He also switched from one type of foam stabilizer to another to get around new labeling laws that would have required the original stabilizer to be disclosed on the label.

Impact: Uihlein got what he wanted: a cheaper, more profitable beer that made a lot of money ... at first. But it tasted terrible, and tended to break down so quickly as the cheap ingredients bonded together and sank to the bottom of the can - forming a substance that "looked disconcertingly like mucus." Philip Van Munchings writes in Beer Blast:

Suddenly Schlitz found itself shipping out a great deal of apparently snot-ridden beer. The brewery knew about it pretty quickly and made a command decision - to do nothing ... Uihlein declined a costly recall for months, wagering that not much of the beer would be subjected to the kinds of temperatures at which most haze forms. He lost the bet, sales plummeted ... and Schlitz began a long steady slide from the top three.

Schlitz finally caved in and recalled 10 million cans of the snot beer. But their reputation was ruined and sales never recovered. In 1981, they shut down their Milwaukee brewing plant; the following year the company was purchased by rival Stroh's. One former mayor of Milwaukee compared the brewery's fortunes to the sinking of the Titanic, asking "How could that big of a business go under so fast?"

Model T is Forever!

SHOULD WE INTRODUCE A NEW CAR?

Ford Model T (Photo: State Library of Victoria)

Executive: Henry Ford, founder of the Ford Motor Company

Background: When Henry Ford first marketed the Model T in 1908, it was a state-of-the-art automobile. "There were cheaper cars on the market," writes Robert Lacey in Ford: The Men and Their Machine, "but no one could offer the same combination of innovation and reliability." Over the years, the price went down dramatically ... and as the first truly affordable quality automobile, the Model T revolutionized American culture.

Decision: The Model T was the only car that the Ford Motor Co. made. As the auto industry grew and competition got stiffer, everyone in the company - from Ford's employees to his family - pushed him to update the design. Lacey writes:

The first serious suggestions that the Model T might benefit from some major updating had been made when the car was only four years old. In 1912 Henry Ford had taken [his family] on their first visit to Europe, and on his return he discovered that his [chief aides] had prepared a surprise for him. [They] had labored to produce a new, low-slung version of the Model T, and the prototype stood in the middle of the factory floor, its gleaming red lacquer-work polished to a high sheen. "He had his hands in his pockets," remembered one eyewitness, "and he walked around the car three or four times, looking at it very closely ... Finally, he got to the left-hand side of the car that was facing me, and he takes his hands out, gets hold of the door, and bang! He ripped the door right off! God! How the man done it, I don't know!"

Ford proceeded to destroy the whole car with his bare hands. It was a message to everyone around him not to mess with his prize creation. Lacey concludes: "The Model T had been the making of Henry Ford, lifting him from being any other Detroit automobile maker to becoming car maker to the world. It had yielded him untold riches and power and pleasure, and it was scarcely surprising that he should feel attached to it. But as the years went by, it became clear that Henry Ford had developed a fixation with his masterpiece which was almost unhealthy." Ford had made his choice clear. In 1925, after more than 15 years on the market, the Model T was pretty much the same car it had been when it debuted. It still had the same noisy, underpowered four-cylinder engine, obsolete "planetary" transmission, and horse-buggy suspension that it had in the very beginning. Sure, Ford made a few concessions to the changing times, such as balloon tires, an electric starter, and a gas pedal on the floor. And by the early 1920s, the Model T was available in a variety of colors beyond Ford black. But the Model T was still ... a Model T. "You can paint up a barn," one hurting New York Ford dealer complained, "but it will still be a barn and not a parlor."

Impact: While Ford rested on his laurels for a decade and a half, his competitors continued to innovate. Four-cylinder engines gave way to more powerful six-cylinder engines with manual clutch-and-gearshift transmissions. These new cars were powerful enough to travel at high speeds made possible by the country's new paved highways. Ford's "Tin Lizzie," designed in an era of dirt roads, was not. Automobile buyers took notice and began trading up; Ford's market share slid to 57% of U.S. automobile sales in 1923 down to 45% in 1925, and to 34% in 1926, as companies like Dodge and General Motors steadily gained ground. By the time Ford finally announced, that a replacement for the Model T was in the works in May 1927, the company had already lost the battle. That year, Chevrolet sold more cars than Ford for the first time. Ford regained first place in 1929 thanks to strong sales of its new Model A, but Chevrolet passed it again the following year and never looked back. "From 1930 onwards," Robert Lacey writes, "the once-proud Ford Motor Company had to be content with second place."

MORE BAD BUSINESS DECISIONS

ROSS PEROT In 1979, Perot employed some of his well-known business acumen and foresaw that Bill Gates was on his way to building Microsoft into a great company. So he offered to buy him out. Gates says Perot offered between $6 million and $15 million; Perot says that Gates wanted $40 million to $60 million. Whatever the numbers were, the two couldn't come to terms, and Perot walked away empty-handed. Today Microsoft is worth hundreds of billions of dollars.

SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE In 1979, the Washington Post offered the Chronicle the opportunity to syndicate a series of articles that two reporters named Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein were writing about a break-in at the Democratic headquarters at Washington, D.C.'s Watergate Hotel. Owner Charles Thieriot said no. "There will be no West Coast interest in the story," he explained. Thus, his rival, the San Francisco Examiner, was able to purchase the rights to the hottest news story of the decade for $500.

W.T. GRANT CO. Photo: Historic Columbus Indiana

In the mid-1970s, executives at the W.T. Grant variety store chain, one of the nation's largest retailers, decided that the best way to increase sales was to increase the number of customers ... by offering credit. It put tremendous "negative incentive" pressure on store managers to issue credit. Employees who didn't meet their credit quotas risked complete humiliation. They had pies thrown in their faces, were forced to push peanuts across the floor with their noses, and were sent through hotel lobbies wearing only diapers. Eager to avoid such total embarrassment, store managers gave credit "to anyone who breathed," including untold thousands of customers who were bad risks. W.T. Grant racked up $800 million worth of bad debts before it finally collapsed in 1977.

ABC-TV

Cast of The Cosby Show (source: Wikipedia)

In 1984, Bill Cosby gave ABC-TV first shot at buying a sitcom he'd created - and would star in - about an upscale black family. But ABC turned him down, apparently "believing the show lacked bite and that viewers wouldn't watch an unrealistic portrayal of blacks as wealthy, well-educated professionals." So Cosby sold his show to NBC instead. What happened? Nothing much - The Cosby Show remained #1 show for four straight years, was a rating winner throughout its eight-year run, lifted NBC from its 10-year status as a last-place network to first place, resurrected TV comedy, and became the most profitable series ever broadcast.

DIGITAL RESEARCH IBM once hired Microsoft founder Bill Gates to come up with the operating software for a new computer that IBM was rushing to market ... and Gates turned to a company called Digital Research. He set up a meeting between owner Gary Kildall and IBM ... but Kildall couldn't make the meeting and sent his wife, Dorothy McEwen, instead. McEwen, who handled contract negotiations for Digital Research, felt that the contract IBM was offering would allow the company to incorporate features from Digital's software into its own proprietary software - which would then compete against Digital. So she turned the contract down. Bill Gates went elsewhere, eventually coming up with a program called DOS, the software that put Microsoft on the map.

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While I'm certain there are some dumb decisions in there, I also think it's easy to point them out after the fact, but maybe not so easy beforehand.
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You missed a real gem.

Google's founders originally tried to sell the software to several tech companies before deciding to make a go of it on their own - because no one liked the Million dollar selling price they were seeking.

Altavista, Excite & Yahoo TURNED THEM DOWN IN 1997 :-O
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Would Microsoft have grown the way it did if Ross Perot had owned it? Like many things, these are imponderables. Perhaps the Beatles wouldn't have been a success under a different label...
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I think the date on the San Francisco Chronicle story is incorrect. By 1979 Woodward and Bernstein were well-known and celebrated for having broken the Watergate story 5 years earlier!
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When I was in college, I had to study a shareholder rights lawsuit that still sticks in my mind.

Henry Ford was sued by some of his biggest shareholders for constantly taking the massive profits of his company and reinvesting them in the company, rather than paying a dividend on stock. He lost the suit, and one of the plaintiffs used his winnings to start his own auto company.

That guy's name was Chrysler.
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A couple of years ago I was working for a startup that was seeking VC money. One of the VC's we talked to admited to one serious mistake a number of years ago.

They turned down a small chain of coffee shops that was trying to go national. They could not see why anyone would pay $2 for a cup of coffee. Starbucks went elsewhere.
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Ted Waite turned a South Dakota pasture into one of the largest most respected computer manufacturing centers in the world. He then hired a "business manager" to take the company the next step. The business manager strangled the help line, changed the marketing strategy, and moved the corporate headquarters to San Diego. Within 3 years, Gateway 2000 was a never again worth a crap laughing stock.
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Microsoft didn't buy DOS, they bought QDOS (Quick and Dirty Operating System) for about $50K. It was a plagiarized version of Digital's CP/M operating system. They turned around and licensed this OS to IBM, then later licensed to Compaq and other clone PC makers. In the end they wound up paying Digital damages, and paid off the Seattle man who "created" QDOS as well. Of course most of this has either been forgotten or buried...
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I know a guy who was the drummer for The Animals (who sang the House of the Rising Sun) but left to start his own band. He works at the guitar shop down my road...
Also my grandparents used to have their own dentist clinic, and one day the Beatles (ALL of them) came in for some kind of emergency treatment or something along those lines. But this was before they were famous, so they didn't think to get their autographs or a picture of them or anything...
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i had read these in the 13th bathroom reader (we have them all in our "library", haha) but it's nice to see them here, too, so that people who don't usually pick up books might read one!!
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If memory serves, Microsoft bought CP/M (which became DOS) for a meger $40,000. Digital Research didn't really lose out, as Microsoft screwed the creator of CP/M and probably wanted to screw over Digital Research as well.
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The winner has to be Gerald Ratner, former CEO of Ratners Group jewellers (now Signet Group). He said, about his own products:

"We also do cut-glass sherry decanters complete with six glasses on a silver-plated tray that your butler can serve you drinks on, all for £4.95. People say, "How can you sell this for such a low price?" I say, because it's total crap."

This nearly bankrupted the company. XD
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What about Xerox PARC? They had PCs, GUI, Email, everything way before MS or Apple. The execs said it was all useless and would never come to anything. They then demonstrated it to Steve Jobs and he stole all the ideas.

As soon as I saw this I expected to see that at the top. BAD NERDS! BAD!

Dummies
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Yeah these are easy to bash now, back in the front seat at the time? Not so easy. Yeah google tried to sell to excite/yahoo, etc., but think what they were asking. For a million we'll give you a search engine. Umm, "we already have that!", "yeah but ours is better", "um, yeah right get out of here!".

No one has a time machine...
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Bill gates never made his own stuff. Everything was also bought or mostly stolen from other companies or small time programmers. One reason why I will never buy a ford. They never innovate, only copy. Kind of like Microsoft.
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Let it be known that Schlitz has released its original formula in long-neck bottles, and it is being sold in ten Chicago venues. I think they are testing to see how it sells. I tried it at Schuba's, and it was really good.
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What about the publisher(s) that turned down J.K. Rowling and her Harry Potter books? Bet the person(s) who turned her away are no longer employed!
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To continue The Beatles-EMI story, it was largely The Beatles' commercial success at EMI that helped fund EMI's Central Research Laboratories division. It was there at EMI's laboratories that the CT Scanner was invented (originally called the EMI Scanner). So you can almost say that Decca Records turning down The Beatles was one of the worst business decisions in history but indirectly, one of the best medical decisions in history as well.
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How about Xerox allowing Apple to reach into their closet of inventions which would never go anywhere, and come out with the mouse. No charge.
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The story about Perot and Gates was a missed opportunity. Perot's most notorious mistake involved a meeting with Arthur Blank and Bernie Marcus. They had gotten Perot to agree to buy a large block of their company and to provide further financing for growth and development. The deal came down to discussing executive perks, particularly cars. Marcus wanted Perot to simply pay off the 6yr old Cadillac he was driving. Perot told him to get a new Chevy since, "my people don't drive Cadillacs". The difference would have only been a few thousand more for the Chevy, but it was money that didn't need to be spent. The discussion broke down, leading Blank and Marcus to walk out and develop their company on their own. You may have heard of it: Home Depot. An investment of less than $20million would have netted Perot more than $10billion, but he wanted to split hairs between a used Caddy and a new Chevy. Talk about value shopping...
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Be careful what you believe; some of these stories aren't true or are mis-remembered/reported. An example right at the (current) bottom: As a hardware designer in the late '70s, I can tell you that liquid crystal displays (LCDs) didn't exist as an option when HP started making digital calculators. They went with LEDs because that's what was available at the time for a reasonable cost. ...If there's a back-story wherein HP turned down the opportunity to be the first to use the LCD, it would STILL have to be something more than ten years after they were already making the LED-display calculators...

R
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@me and pylenyh:
Apple paid Xerox a lot of company stock to see the GUI research being done at PARC (or Palo Alto RESEARCH Center). PARC didn't develop products; they did research and let others buy the rights to use it. The only thieving that happened was when BillG extorted the Macintosh UI from Apple on the threat of killing applications in development for the Macintosh.

Oh, and Xerox's GUI research was actually nothing like what we take for granted today. All of the concepts in the modern GUI were developed by Apple, based on the research they paid to see from Xerox.
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So, Computer Repair, you say that you won't buy a Ford because you say that they steal ideas... How many of MS's products do you currently use?
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by far the WORST business decision in history is the FAILURE of Xerox to listen to it's own researcherse. Xerox became concerned about the new "Personal Comuputers", and creatd Palo Alto Reseach Center ( PARC) to tell them the future of PCs..PARC invented the Mouse, the ethernet the Grpahic USER interface and basically built the first modern PC.. Xerox wasn't intested in anything that didn't have paper put in one end and copies come out the other.. I think both Steve Jobs & Bill Gates should send them Christmas cards every year for their inability to realize what they had :-)
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Does anyone know the real story of movie producer, TYLER PERRY?

This man started by writing and producing plays and performing them on the "Chitlin' Circuit" of churches and small venues throughout the South. After a difficult start, his plays created sold-out, standing room only crowds for several consecutive years. He then approached Hollywood studio executives with screenplays to be made into feature films.

Even though he had already grossed about $75 MILLION over 8 years of touring his plays, Paramount, MGM, Disney and several others ALL declined to work with him. They all felt it was too risky to create low-budget comedy films with a primarily African-American cast, and with a religious undertone. In fact, they refused to give him necessary distribution, even if HE himself put up the majority of the money needed for filming and production.

Tyler Perry used the $75 Million he had saved to build his own studio lot near Atlanta, and began making and distributing his own films. With guidance from Oprah Winfrey, he has since released 12 Blockbuster films, and his brilliant formula and body of work has earned the highest ROI in movie history (higher ROI than Speilberg, George Lucas, James Cameron, etc).

As of 2010, his net worth is just shy of ONE BILLION dollars, and he owns complete distribution rights to all of his work.

Take THAT, you Hollywood snobs!!!!!!!!!!
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Subject: Great decision Blunders and Lessons Learned-
Does anyone know why H. Ross Perot missed out on an opportunity to buy Microsoft? I'm taking a class and need the answers ASAP!!!
1.Review the circumstances leading to the decision, research or data used, the decision itself and main reasoning behind it; outcomes (who was affected and how-look inside and outside the organization), errors in the decision; and any corrective taken.
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