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The Edsel, New Coke, others?
Polaroid... made the first digital cameras and disappeared.
NFL and kneelers.
Colt firearms
Originally Posted by watch4bear
Colt firearms



And Winchester. And Remington.
Kodak
Originally Posted by Sitka deer
Polaroid... made the first digital cameras and disappeared.


Are you sure that wasn't Kodak?


A lot of people would say Crystal Pepsi, but actually a huge amount of it was sold for a while. And then it wasn't.
Sure wish I owned a half dozen or so Edsels. They really suffered from mismanagement and marketing.
Ford, recalling Firestone tires.
Obamacare . . .
Sears & Roebuck

Montgomery Wards
Blackberry. Thought smart phones weren't a threat.

The NFL. Thought kneeling during the anthem would catch on.
Originally Posted by Son_of_the_Gael
Originally Posted by Sitka deer
Polaroid... made the first digital cameras and disappeared.


Are you sure that wasn't Kodak?


A lot of people would say Crystal Pepsi, but actually a huge amount of it was sold for a while. And then it wasn't.


Yup, I stand corrected.
How about, Napoleon selling Louisiana to Monroe, and Jefferson for eighty-six million francs, or three cents an acre. laugh
Got more Nap?
Originally Posted by tpcollins
Obamacare . . .
Are you kidding...that was one of the biggest corporate coups in history...the HMO's are still riding that one all the way to the bank!!!
Of course, for us...that's a very different story.
Originally Posted by tpcollins
Obamacare . . .

That’s not a corporate blunder. That’s a dipchit blunder. Get yer facts straight.
The Nova in Spanish speaking nations.
Xerox

Invented Alto, which had the graphical user interface, mouse, local are networking, what-you-see-is-what-you-get (WYSIWYG) word processor...sold it all because they thought no one would use it. Steve Jobs bought it, and created the McIntosh.
Originally Posted by wabigoon
How about, Napoleon selling Louisiana to Monroe, and Jefferson for eighty-six million francs, or three cents an acre. laugh
Got more Nap?


Considering it was right after 1800 (IIRC) and we were forced to take Oklahoma wink and all...

But Russia is the one that really screwed up. We bought AK right after the Civil War for about a quarter the money and only got three-quarters the area... but there were no coonasses! The difference in cost was huge considering it was well over 50 years later...
Originally Posted by wabigoon
How about, Napoleon selling Louisiana to Monroe, and Jefferson for eighty-six million francs, or three cents an acre. laugh
Got more Nap?


Actually a double blunder for Napoleon, in a way, kind of.

Napoleon refilled his coffers with the later intent of retaking Louisiana from the US for "breach of contract".


Didnt happen due to unforseen circunstances. The debacle in Russia and loosing His base of operations in Haiti to révolutionnaires.
NASA / Lockheed

Lost the Mars Orbiter because Locheed used English and NASA used metric.
You fellows beat me to Alaska.
Time Warner's purchase of AOL...biggest corporate loss in history.
HP hiring Mark Hurd. Then Carly Fiorina. They actually played "Ding Dong The Witch is Dead" at the Boise site the day she left. Ouch.
Originally Posted by GunGeek
Xerox

Invented Alto, which had the graphical user interface, mouse, local are networking, what-you-see-is-what-you-get (WYSIWYG) word processor...sold it all because they thought no one would use it. Steve Jobs bought it, and created the McIntosh.

Jobs didn't buy it, Xerox let him copy it because they were clueless as to what they had. They basically gave it away.
PBS did a special about the invention of computers and it was mind blowing how far advanced Xerox was ahead of everyone else.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xerox_Alto

The Alto became well known in Silicon Valley and its GUI was increasingly seen as the future of computing. In 1979, Steve Jobs arranged a visit to Xerox PARC, in which Apple Computer personnel would receive a demonstration of the technology from Xerox in exchange for Xerox being able to purchase stock options in Apple. After two visits to see the Alto, Apple engineers used the concepts to introduce the Apple Lisa and Macintosh systems.
Every corporation that donated to invested in the Clinton Foundation expecting some political favoritism in return.


Bwa-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!
IBM when they made their deal with Microsoft.

Zima
Encore beer
Betamax
Motorola staying analog with cell phones- thought digital wouldn't wok well
Originally Posted by Sitka deer
Originally Posted by wabigoon
How about, Napoleon selling Louisiana to Monroe, and Jefferson for eighty-six million francs, or three cents an acre. laugh
Got more Nap?


Considering it was right after 1800 (IIRC) and we were forced to take Oklahoma wink and all...

But Russia is the one that really screwed up. We bought AK right after the Civil War for about a quarter the money and only got three-quarters the area... but there were no coonasses! The difference in cost was huge considering it was well over 50 years later...
Originally Posted by Sitka deer
Originally Posted by wabigoon
How about, Napoleon selling Louisiana to Monroe, and Jefferson for eighty-six million francs, or three cents an acre. laugh
Got more Nap?


Considering it was right after 1800 (IIRC) and we were forced to take Oklahoma wink and all...

But Russia is the one that really screwed up. We bought AK right after the Civil War for about a quarter the money and only got three-quarters the area... but there were no coonasses! The difference in cost was huge considering it was well over 50 years later...


If there had been coonasses there, it would have been twice as expensive.
Betamax
pearl beer
Originally Posted by RoninPhx
pearl beer


Since 1883!!!! laugh laugh laugh
Them new pickles Wendys started using about 2 or 3 yrs ago

* gag *
GM Introducing the "No Va" in Mexico. Including the step panel that read "Corpse" by Fischer...

P&G trying to keep Rely Tampons on the market instead of immediately pulling them.
When McDonald's 1st opened in Japan, They couldn't sell a Burger. To Save money they had wrapped all burgers and white paper. White is the color of death, they wear it to funerals. nobody'd buy a deathburger.
Seward's Folly wasn't...except for the Russians.
Originally Posted by slumlord
Them new pickles Wendys started using about 2 or 3 yrs ago

* gag *



A resounding "AMEN" from the gallery!
Originally Posted by wabigoon
The Edsel, New Coke, others?



I have dad's 57 or 8 Edsel in the iron pile.

Not sure the year exactly, but it has the Edsel engine in it...not the FE.



Biggest blunder......hmmm......I guess the rear end trouble IH had with the new 460 tractor was a real killer.

Apparently they never fully recovered from that mess.


They tried to use the same rear end from the 400 and 450. Maybe even the old M.
By far, the biggest blunders committed by corporations are stock buyback programs. Happens all the time and at best, it is payroll expense for bloated share float from stock awards. Mostly, it is just burning money.
Posted By: DMc Re: Big Time Corporation Blunders? - 02/07/18
And the winner is.....!!!!!!

Originally Posted by Jim in Idaho
Every corporation that donated to invested in the Clinton Foundation expecting some political favoritism in return.


Bwa-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!
Posted By: DMc Re: Big Time Corporation Blunders? - 02/07/18
Dang I'm old! Long time ago, Coors Beer took and anti-gun stance. Every state that sold Coors erupted with Coors boycotts. They quickly reversed their position.


DMc
New Coke . . . A Blunder

Let's see they were able to switch "old coke" to high fructose corn syrup from more expensive sugar and bring it back to the public's demands for the old good stuff.

The brand name was mentioned about every ten minutes somewhere and they did not have to pay a cent for advertising.

Laser disc.
Billy Beer.
K-Mart hiring Rosie O as spokesperson.
VW and thier clean diesels that we’re only clean when hooked up to the test stand. Buybacks and fines will be in the tens of billions
J.C. Pennies hiring Ellen The Degenerate for publicity.
VW and the emissions fakery.
Along about 1965, Chase Mortgage was one of the early adopters of IBM's new Winchester technology-- the codename for what we know as a hard drive. The converted all their tape-based operations to this new hardware-- 20MB drives that were the size of a washing machine.

After about 6 months of smooth sailing, the hard drive crashed.

The next morning, there was a shriek from the boardroom: "What do you mean there's no backup????" It turns out they'd decided the data processing guys had decided you didn't need to backup up their new Winchesters. Recovery plans were discussed. The boardroom lizards finally decided to take out a full page ad in the WSJ something like:

"If you have a mortgage with Chase Mortgage, we're sorry. We've lost all your account information. Please copy and send all your mortage information to us with your next payment."

They didn't get one response. In short order Chase Mortgage ceased to exist. If the lizards had just shut up and stayed quiet, probably 98% of the customers would have sent in their checks the next month and no one would have been the wiser.
Harley Davidson. Bought MV Agusta for 109 million from the Castiglioni brothers, poured millions into the company, paid off their debts, and invested in production infrastructure. Panicked during the 2008 downturn and sold the company back to the Castiglionis for one euro after two years of ownership. Combined with their mismanagement of Buell, this cost HD well over $250 million. Harley has been a "lifestyle" company for so long they don't seem to understand how to compete as a motorcycle company.
John Law and his "Mississippi Bubble". Is a pretty famous one!!

http://www.mshistorynow.mdah.ms.gov/articles/70/john-law-and-the-mississippi-bubble-1718-1720
GE. Judging from their performance under the recently-retired Immelt, they would have been about the same if they'd hired a [bleep] and ordered him to wreck the company.
Originally Posted by JBARTRAM
By far, the biggest blunders committed by corporations are stock buyback programs. Happens all the time and at best, it is payroll expense for bloated share float from stock awards. Mostly, it is just burning money.


I disagree under some circumstances.

First, if a company has excess cash, can't see a profitable opportunity to invest in plant and equipment, and can't find a good company to buy with it, the excess cash may attract a hostile takeover.

Second, it makes the stock price increase (supply and demand). Yes, top management usually benefits from this. But so do the stockholders.

It is not a payroll expense.
Most everything about Enron.
At one point in history, Pepsi was on the ropes, and about to go under. They made an offer to Coke to buy them out. Coke said "piss off and die " (they did not see Pepsi as a real threat, and they were worried about some strawberry drink you likely never even heard of. Pepsi fought back from the brink more from the insult, than market forces. Who's laughing now?
Originally Posted by Rock Chuck
Seward's Folly wasn't...except for the Russians.

As I understand concerning Alaska. Russia had a heck of a time managing the place. Consider the time a letter would take travelling from Moscow to Sitka (New Archangel). Also the Russians had experienced very good relations with the U.S. and probably thought it very likely the hated British right over the hill in Canada would steal Alaska anyway. So best to sell it to a friend than to allow an enemy to move any closer. Who knew then about the gold, the oil, and the coming enmity?
Union Carbide sold off all profitable product lines (Eveready, Prestone, and others) to fend off a hostile take over by Dupont.
The USPS was asked if it wanted control over emails. The then postmaster general said no it's a fad.
Alaska also gave the US control of the northern Pacific. I agree that Russia had a hard time managing it with Moscow a half a world away. They've always suffered because of the lack of year round seaports and travel through Siberia was terrible at best. It was something like 40 years after we bought AK before they completed the Trans-Siberia railroad. It was almost 6000 miles long and wasn't exactly a high speed route. Even when it reached the Pacific, it was still a long way to Alaska.
Originally Posted by Orion2000
P&G trying to keep Rely Tampons on the market instead of immediately pulling them.


Can't say I blame 'em, have you ever tried to pull one?
The Ford Pinto was a pretty big one. Any time you find out that your product has a potentially deadly flaw and then have records showing where you got the company to calculate the number of potential deaths mutliplied by the expected wrongful death settlement and then not do a recall because paying the settlements is cheaper is a pretty big screw up.
This ones up to about $65 billion

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