// STARTUP COMPARISON
Blockbuster vs Yahoo
Blockbuster failed in 2010 due to Competition. Yahoo failed in 2017 due to Founder Chaos. Different causes, different sectors, different eras — but the same simulation outcome.
| METRIC | 🔥 Blockbuster | 🔥 Yahoo |
|---|---|---|
| Sector | Media | Media |
| Country | USA | USA |
| Founded | 1985 | 1995 |
| Died | 2010 | 2017 |
| Raised | Public company | Public company |
| Peak | $5B valuation · 9,000 stores | $125B valuation |
| Primary Cause | Competition | Founder Chaos |
// WHY EACH FAILED
🔥 Blockbuster
Competition
Blockbuster had 9,000 stores and 60M registered members at its peak. In 2000, Reed Hastings offered to sell Netflix to Blockbuster for $50M — Blockbuster declined. Blockbuster relied on $800M in annual late fees to subsidize its real estate costs. Netflix eliminated late fees in 2005. Blockbuster filed for bankruptcy in 2010.
// LESSON
If your business model depends on customer pain as a revenue source, digital will eliminate that pain and your revenue simultaneously. Convenience always wins.
If your business model depends on customer pain as a revenue source, digital will eliminate that pain and your revenue simultaneously. Convenience always wins.
🔥 Yahoo
Founder Chaos
Yahoo rejected Microsoft's $44.6B acquisition offer in 2008. CEO Jerry Yang was forced out. A series of failed CEOs followed, including Carol Bartz (fired by phone) and Scott Thompson (resume fraud). The company missed mobile, missed search, and missed social. Verizon acquired Yahoo's core business for $4.5B in 2017.
// LESSON
Saying no to an acquisition at peak is not courage — it requires a plan. Yahoo had no plan. Refusing $44.6B without a credible growth strategy is a $40B mistake.
Saying no to an acquisition at peak is not courage — it requires a plan. Yahoo had no plan. Refusing $44.6B without a credible growth strategy is a $40B mistake.
// EXPLORE FURTHER