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A Case Study In Corporate Fear

A Case Study In Corporate Fear

Written by: Taras Wayner
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"A Case Study in Corporate Fear" deconstructs how fear transforms successful companies into corporate casualties. Each episode forensically examines a different business failure, revealing how fear infiltrates decision-making and sabotages success. From Kodak's digital denial to Blockbuster's streaming stumble, we analyze the patterns of fear that destroy companies and careers. Join host Taras Wayner as we turn fear into your greatest teacher, helping you recognize and overcome the paralysis of professional fear. Whether you're a CEO or a rising professional, this podcast delivers actionable insights to help you lead with courage and learn how others failed so you never do. Visit fear-incorporated.com for additional resources and training opportunities.

© 2025 A Case Study In Corporate Fear
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Episodes
  • BOEING – When Fear Took Flight
    Oct 2 2025

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    How did Boeing transform from an engineering powerhouse willing to bet the company on revolutionary aircraft into one where engineers feared speaking up about safety concerns? This episode examines the 25-year cultural shift following the McDonnell Douglas merger that led to the 737 MAX crashes, killing 346 people. From Bill Allen's audacious 707 and 747 programs to the geographic separation of executives from engineers, we trace the decisions prioritizing speed and cost over the redundancy and safety that once defined Boeing. Plus, how new CEO Kelly Ortberg is leading the company back to its engineering roots – and proving financial success doesn't require sacrificing excellence.

    Key Topics Covered:

    • The Golden Era (1952-1996): How William McPherson Allen bet the company on the 707, the audacious 747 program, and the collaborative "Working Together" approach that created the best-selling 777
    • The Merger That Changed Everything (1996): Why the McDonnell Douglas acquisition brought a finance-focused culture that overwhelmed Boeing's engineering DNA
    • Critical Turning Points: The move to Chicago that separated executives from engineers, the decision to upgrade rather than innovate when Airbus launched the A320 Neo, and the MCAS design that abandoned Boeing's redundancy philosophy
    • The Culture of Fear: How countdown clocks, career suicide for questioning timelines, and a 2,000-mile gap between decision-makers and builders created an environment where engineers couldn't speak up
    • The Crashes and Aftermath: $20 billion in fines, 20 months grounded, and the whistleblowers who exposed systematic quality control failures
    • The Return to Engineering (2024-Present): How CEO Kelly Ortberg is rebuilding Boeing's culture by moving back to Seattle and proving engineering excellence drives financial success

    Notable Quotes:

    "When people say I changed the culture of Boeing, that was my intent. I wanted it run like a modern business rather than a great engineering firm." - Harry Stonecipher, Former Boeing CEO

    "The CEO of an aircraft company should know how to design aircraft, not spreadsheets." - Elon Musk

    "Boeing had created a culture where questioning the timeline was career suicide." - Former Boeing employee testimony to Congress

    Key Figures Discussed:

    • William McPherson Allen - Boeing president who bet the company on jet technology
    • Joe Sutter - Chief engineer of the 747, pioneer of redundant safety systems
    • Alan Mulally - Led the 777 program, passed over for CEO (later turned around Ford)
    • Phil Condit - Engineer-turned-CEO who orchestrated the McDonnell Douglas merger
    • Jim McNerney - First Boeing CEO with no aviation experience
    • Dennis Muilenburg - CEO during the 737 MAX crashes
    • Kelly Ortberg - Current CEO returning Boeing to engineering focus

    Connect with Taras

    · Website: fear-incorporated.com

    · LinkedIn: Taras Wayner

    · Instagram: @fear_incorporated

    · Email: fear@fear-incorporated.com

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    34 mins
  • How Jaguar Finally Outran Fear
    Sep 3 2025

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    While many have called Jaguar's rebrand "the worst marketing decision they'd ever seen" and declared it "brand suicide," it just may be Jaguar's bravest business decision in decades.

    In this episode of "A Case Study in Corporate Fear," host Taras Wayner examines how a brand that once epitomized independence became trapped in automotive purgatory with zero profitability and a rapidly aging customer base. And how, for over fifty years, Jaguar consistently chose fear over courage at every crucial decision point, allowing it to systematically destroy one of the world's most iconic automotive marques.

    We’ll analyze how Jaguar's controversial 2024 rebrand, universally mocked as "brand suicide," might actually represent the most courageous business decision the company has made in decades. When Managing Director Rawdon Glover bravely declared he was "willing to lose 85% of current customers to save the brand," he chose the bold, uncompromising vision that Sir William Lyons would have embraced.

    Timeline of Events

    · 1922: Founded as Swallow Sidecar Company by Sir William Lyons

    · 1948: XK120 becomes fastest production car in the world

    · 1951-1957: Dominates Le Mans with C-Type and D-Type victories

    · 1961: E-Type launches - Enzo Ferrari calls it "the most beautiful car ever made"

    · 1966: Merges with British Motor Corporation (first fear-driven decision)

    · 1968: Government forces merger creating British Leyland Motor Corporation

    · 1970s: Production stagnates despite XJ6 being rated "best car in the world"

    · 1984: Spun off as independent public company under Margaret Thatcher

    · 1989: Ford acquires Jaguar after bidding war with GM

    · 1999-2009: Ford ownership results in zero profitability for 19 years

    · 2008: Tata Motors acquires Jaguar from Ford

    · 2012: Tesla Model S redefines luxury car market

    · November 2024: Controversial rebrand launches with "Copy Nothing" campaign

    · December 2024: Jaguar stops production, preparing for EV-only 2026 return

    Key Quotes

    Sir William Lyons: "Cars should be sculptures that happened to move, not just machines that happened to look decent."

    Enzo Ferrari: "The E-Type is the most beautiful car ever made."

    Car and Driver on X-Type: "The X-Type feels like a Ford wearing a Jaguar costume."

    Rawdon Glover: "We're willing to lose 85% of our current customers to save the brand."

    Rawdon Glover: "To bring back such a globally renowned brand, we had to be fearless."


    Further Reading & Resources

    · "Jaguar: History of a Classic" by Andrew Whyte

    · "The Most Beautiful Car Ever Made" documentary on Jaguar E-Type

    · YOUTUBE: Jaguar - The FULL Story of What Happened – https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=yyY5kqqVq1k


    Connect with Taras

    · Website: fear-incorporated.com

    · LinkedIn: Taras Wayner

    · Instagram: @fear_incorporated

    · Email: fear@fear-incorporated.com

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    30 mins
  • NEW COKE – When The Fizz Goes Flat
    Aug 7 2025

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    After 99 years of guarding their secret formula, Coca-Cola made the boldest move in consumer goods history. When Pepsi's taste tests revealed that consumers preferred their sweeter formula 57% of the time, Coca-Cola panicked and took the unthinkable step – they altered their sacred recipe.

    In this episode of "A Case Study in Corporate Fear," host Taras Wayner examines how fear transformed the world's most successful beverage company into the architect of its near destruction. From Coca-Cola's rise as an American icon to Pepsi's psychological warfare through the "Pepsi Challenge," we uncover how brilliant leaders can make disastrously foolish decisions when driven by fear.

    But this isn't just another corporate disaster story. This is about discovering that there's an antidote to fear – and how Coca-Cola's response to their mistake turned one of the biggest blunders in business history into one of the greatest comebacks ever.

    Timeline of Events

    · 1886: Dr. John Stith Pemberton creates Coca-Cola as medicinal tonic

    · 1915: Iconic contour bottle design created (inspired by cocoa bean, not cola nut)

    · 1931: Santa Claus advertising campaign begins, creating modern Santa image

    · 1945: Coke available in 120 countries after WWII expansion

    · 1975: Pepsi launches "Pepsi Challenge" taste tests

    · 1983: Michael Jackson signs record-breaking $5M Pepsi endorsement deal

    · 1984: Coca-Cola conducts 200,000 consumer taste tests

    · April 23, 1985: Roberto Goizueta announces New Coke formula change

    · July 10, 1985: Coca-Cola Classic returns after 79-day New Coke disaster

    · 2002: "Coke II" (rebranded New Coke) quietly discontinued

    Essential Books

    · I'd Like the World to Buy a Coke by David Greising - Comprehensive Coca-Cola corporate history

    · Blink by Malcolm Gladwell - Analysis of taste test psychology and New Coke case study

    · The Real Thing: Truth and Power at the Coca-Cola Company by Constance Hays - Inside look at corporate culture

    · Secret Formula by Frederick Allen - Definitive history of Coca-Cola from founding to modern era

    · Citizen Coke by Bartow Elmore - Environmental and social impact analysis

    Academic and Scholarly Sources

    · Harvard Business Review case studies on New Coke disaster

    · Journal of Marketing Research papers on taste testing methodology

    · Journal of Consumer Psychology articles on brand loyalty vs. product preference

    Documentary Films and Video

    · The Cola Wars - Documentary series on Pepsi vs. Coca-Cola rivalry

    · Coca-Cola: The Real Story - Corporate history documentary


    Connect with Taras

    · Website: fear-incorporated.com

    · LinkedIn: Taras Wayner

    · Instagram: @fear_incorporated

    · Email: fear@fear-incorporated.com

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    35 mins
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