| When the Mismanagerial Class Destroys Great Companies 
 by Marko Jukic
 
 In  2005, Paul Otellini became the new CEO of Intel, America’s premier  semiconductor designer and manufacturer. He was the first CEO of the  company not to have a background in engineering. Sometime shortly  thereafter, Otellini entered discussions with Steve Jobs on whether  Intel would manufacture the chips needed for Apple’s secretive,  potentially revolutionary new project: the iPhone. Ultimately, Otellini  declined. He thought the initial costs would be too high and the  resulting sales too low. Since then, Apple has sold 2.3 billion iPhones.  Intel flatly missed out on the mobile computing revolution ushered in  by Apple, which put Intel’s competitors in various domains—including  companies like Samsung, TSMC, and most significantly Arm—squarely in the  leading position that Intel once had.
 
 The same year that  Otellini took the reins at Intel, James McNerney became the new CEO of  Boeing, America’s one and only manufacturer of large passenger airplanes  and a key contractor to NASA and the Pentagon. Like Otellini, McNerney  was an MBA—Master of Business Administration—not an engineer. Though he  wasn’t the first non-engineer ever to lead the century-old company, he  was the first without any previous experience in aerospace. Aiming to  cut costs, McNerney determined that, rather than designing and building a  whole new plane, the company would simply modify one of its key planes,  the 737, to be the new and improved 737 MAX. Not long after entering  service a decade later, two of these updated planes inexplicably crashed  shortly after takeoff, killing a combined 346 people. The cause was a  convoluted series of poor and ultimately fatal design choices that  Boeing had not disclosed to pilots, in order to preserve the marketing  fiction of a merely updated plane, rather than a new one, which would  have required the, in hindsight, comparatively trivial burden of  retraining pilots.
 
 While Otellini and McNerney were taking  charge, across the Pacific Ocean another chief executive was wrapping up  his term. Nobuyuki Idei had become the CEO of Sony in 1999, becoming  responsible for Japan’s most innovative consumer electronics and  entertainment company. Three long, consecutive tenures by founding  engineers had turned Sony from a radio repair shop amidst the ruins of  post-war Japan into a global conglomerate that gave the world the  Walkman, the CD, and the PlayStation, among many other state-of-the-art  electronics products. Idei was the first CEO not to have a background in  engineering. He decided to reorganize Sony to be “independent from past  glory and the founders’ shadow,” adopting modern managerial techniques  and structures. Since he left, Sony has not produced a single new  transformative electronics product.
 
 Since 2021, Intel’s revenue  has crashed by a third. Since 2018, Boeing’s has fallen by a quarter.  Sony’s revenue hasn’t meaningfully grown since 2008. It is easy to tell  when a company stalls or stumbles. But it takes a meticulous, in-depth  investigation to determine whether such failings are evidence of  organizational dysfunction, or just the temporary setbacks and necessary  hurdles that any competent organization might face. When failures can  be traced to bad strategy or structure, the mistake’s origin might  already be decades in the past. It is remarkable that three modern-day  high-tech companies, at the tops of very different fields, all made  catastrophic strategic errors apparently as soon as they put outsiders  to the company’s technical tradition of knowledge in charge. They are  unlikely to be the only similar cases in the global economy.
 
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 Tom
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