Kodak invented the world's first digital camera in 1975 but buried it for nearly two decades because the company was making $2 billion annually from film sales, demonstrating that the most dangerous moment in business is not when things are going badly, but when they are going so well that companies stop paying attention to what's coming next; successful companies often fail because they become emotionally attached to their current business model and fear losing present profits, which prevents them from adapting to technological changes that will ultimately destroy their industry.
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They Had a $31 Billion Empire , Then Ignored One Small Thing That Destroyed It #business #wealthAñadido:
In 1975, a 24-year-old engineer walked into a meeting at Kodak headquarters.
He had just built something that had never existed before.
A camera with no film.
A camera that captured images [music] digitally. He called it the world's first digital camera.
His bosses looked at it, studied it, then locked it in a drawer.
Because Kodak made $2 billion a year selling film. And a camera that needed no film was a camera that needed [music] no Kodak. So, they buried it for nearly two decades. And while they [music] buried it, they told themselves the same thing every year. Nobody will ever give up physical photos. [music] People want something they can hold.
Digital will never replace film.
By 1996, [music] Kodak was worth $31 billion. 140,000 employees worldwide. They owned the photography industry completely. [music] Then something changed. Sony, Canon, Nikon, companies with nothing to protect [music] started selling digital cameras aggressively. And consumers didn't hesitate.
By 2000, digital camera sales were exploding.
By 2004, film sales had collapsed by 75%.
Kodak scrambled. [music] They tried to launch their own digital cameras, but it was too late. Because the market didn't just move on from film, it moved on from cameras entirely.
[music] The iPhone launched in 2007.
By 2012, Kodak filed for bankruptcy. [music] A company worth $31 billion gone. And the most [music] painful part?
They invented the very technology that destroyed them.
The engineer who built that first [music] digital camera in 1975, his name was Steve Sasson. Kodak held the patent.
They owned the future and they chose the [music] present instead.
So, here's the real lesson. It's not that Kodak was stupid. It's that they were too comfortable.
Because the most dangerous moment in any business [music] isn't when things are going badly.
It's when things are going so well that you stop paying attention to what's coming next.
Like if you want to start building your first million, like in comment billionaire if you want to start building your first billion.
If you want to think like this consistently, subscribe to or this might be the last time you ever see us.
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