ADVERTISEMENT

Too many business leaders say they have a company strategy. Heavily armed with goals and slogans, it seems like they do have everything under control. But what if they don’t? What if they still make mistakes by implementing poor decisions that could easily end in disaster?

Well, today we’re diving into such instances to see how big and small businesses are no strangers to, basically, ruining themselves. And those who survived have a decision on their record that still makes their shareholders’ hair crawl and that they regret for the rest of their lives.

“What company bankrupted itself (or nearly bankrupted itself) through poorly thought-out and/or unnecessary decisions?” Redditor WolfgangCaesor asked people. The thread was upvoted 44.3k times, so it seems like many found it interesting. Below we rolled up some of the most illuminating cases that show how one bad step can ruin a whole marathon, even for the best runners.

#1

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later A bakery that sold cupcakes and cookies (no full-sized cakes) across the street from a liberal arts high school. The school is known for not only being VERY arts-centric but also for being very LGBT-friendly. If I had to guess, I'd say that a full 33% of the kids there are LGBT of some type. EVERY student is supportive of LGBT rights and has had protests in support (often, with the school's staff being supportive and helping to organize and have a safe area for them to protest in). The neighborhood is VERY artsy and LGBT-Friendly.

The kids would come in every morning before school, pop across the street at lunch, and stop by before heading home after school. The Bakery made BANK on these kids. The parents would buy from there for birthday parties and events all the time (like 6 doz. cupcakes for the birthday). So they were doing well.

Suddenly, "baker's rights" became a thing and refusing to make a gay wedding cake was all over Fox News. The owners of the shop were Fox News watchers and thought to themselves, "Yeah, why should we bake a gay cake?" They proceeded to put a sign in their window announcing to the world that they were Christians and wouldn't bake a gay wedding cake.

REMINDER: THEY DIDN'T DO WEDDING CAKES AT ALL!!! Furthermore, nobody had asked them to do one.

Strangely, they went under in just over four months. It's almost like advertising your prejudices against the people you depend on for your income isn't a good idea. Not only did the kids stop going, but they told their parents and their other friends' parents not to go there anymore because they're prejudiced. So their ENTIRE customer base stopped going. The houses on that street are, no joke, 50% owned by well-to-do LGBT couples. So they even lost their foot-traffic business.

By the time they figured out their mistake, it was too late. It was burned in the community's mind that this was NOT where you wanted to shop.

Of course, they screamed and ranted about how they were being persecuted by people not spending their money at their shop, how they were being "attacked" for their beliefs by the kids going to McDonald's instead of their shop.

IDIOTS! They had it made. But they had to open their traps and spew hate on their own customer base. They could have been in business for another 40 years! That school expanded a couple of years later to add another full building and a further 500 kids, merging with the city's public school system, which FURTHER would have increased their customer-base.

SMH.

PollutionZero , pexels Report

ADVERTISEMENT
#2

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later JCPenney tried to stop bullsh**ting customers and it backfired. They said no more sales, they’re just going to price everything low, because pretty much all sales at department stores are lies anyway. You’re not really getting 70% off, the retail price was deliberately set stupid high to convince you it was a great deal. But the discount price is the actual value of it.
So yeah JCPenney’s heart was in the right place but ultimately it failed because customers are really that dumb and would rather be lied to.

Phil_Drill , flickr Report

#3

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later Sears ended their catalog/mail order business in 1993. For over 100 years they had sold everything from hubcaps to houses via mail order and shipped them all over the country.

Amazon was founded in 1994.

kkngs , flickr Report

Add photo comments
POST
johanna_zamora avatar
Grumble O'Pug
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Think of what they were positioned for and think about what they missed out on.

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#4

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later An A&W burger company tried to outsell McDonald's 1/4pounder with a 1/3pounder but Americans thought 1/3 was less than 1/4 so it failed really fast.

sadsoveryverysad Report

#5

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later My hometowns shopping mall and movie theater made a rule that no one under 18 could enter after 3pm without a parent present. This included the week and weekend.

You know how malls survive without teenagers with disposable income? They don't.

trainiac12 , pexels Report

Add photo comments
POST
mintyminameow avatar
Mewton’s Third Paw
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The mall might have gone out of business anyway. Many that let teens in still did. This mall might have been having a theft problem.

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
ADVERTISEMENT
#6

in my hometown, a group of coffee shops and other small businesses didnt like the loud noise and smoke from busses coming and going all day because the bus terminal was right around the corner from them. they complained about it, they moved the terminal somewhere else. not long after, they realized (too late) that most of their business came from people waiting for the bus or just stepping out the bus. the place is a wasteland now

anonymous_guy111 Report

#7

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later One time Red Lobster offered an unlimited king crab leg deal, cause they brought the servings out slowly and were like 'nobody is gonna sit there for 6 hours and just eat king crab legs'.

Actually, lots of people did. So many they lost millions.

Omniwing , flickr Report

#8

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later In 1998 Yahoo refused to buy Google for $1 million.

In 2002 Yahoo offered to buy Google for $3 billion, but Google wanted $5 billion. Yahoo refused the offer.

In 2006 Yahoo was to buy Facebook for $1.1 billion, but Yahoo's Ceo lowered it to $800 million and Facebook backed out.

In 2008 Microsoft offered to buy Yahoo for $44.6 billion, but Yahoo refused.

In 2016 Verizon bought Yahoo for $4.6 billion.

WickedCoolUsername , flickr Report

Add photo comments
POST
wandiledludlu avatar
Sum Guy
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I hate things like this because it assumes that if yahoo bought Facebook, the trajectory of Facebook would still be what it is today. We look at the business now and think these companies are stupid for not buying them when small, neglecting the fact that everything might have changed with new owners... That being said, yahoo is bad at business

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
#9

Circuit City. Major retail chain in the 1980s that collapsed under mismanagement. It’s arguably biggest blunder was firing all of their experienced, better paid workers for cheaper inexperienced ones. Apparently selling merchandise and keeping customers happy is important in the retail business. Who knew?

Mount_Drew Report

Add photo comments
POST
nfrlprdpr avatar
Mazer
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

A real shame, so many retailers don’t get that their employees are key to customer satisfaction

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#10

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later There was a donut shop by my high school. Opened at 6am and closed at 5pm so students would be there every day before school started at 7:30 and after school ended at 2:15. They changed their hours to 8am-3pm and couldn’t make anymore money. They shut down a few months after the change.

hurr4drama , flickr Report

#11

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later Steve Ballmer nearly killed Microsoft. He thought smart phones were stupid. Thought the cloud was dumb. And did a few more things that were just egregiously stupid and took on a lot of debt. Their new CEO is doing a great job though.

Kdog122025 , wikimedia Report

Add photo comments
POST
jamesfogden avatar
JXXXF
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The cloud kind of is dumb as people don't realize their data isn't just magically stored... its on a centralized server... if that goes tits up, everyone loses their data... its just a way to charge you monthly for storage as a service... clever for the companies, not so much for the users...

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#12

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later I don’t know if they’re gone but SKYPE sh*t their pants during the race they had market lead and ten years of practice in.

Then covid hit and everyone was stuck in doors but wanted to still talk face to face zoom popped up while Skype was cleaning up in the bathroom.

audio_54 , flickr Report

Add photo comments
POST
thandeit avatar
Random Panda
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I think this was pretty much Microsoft's fault. Skype went downhill after MS bought them. Now they're pushing that cursed MS Teams app in its' place.

kingkashue avatar
King Kashue
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

A must watch: Brennan Lee Mulligan (one of the funniest comedians around) as Skype's CEO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZI0w_pwZY3E

ohxrkqra avatar
Kira Okah
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Microsoft. They held place until purchased by Microsoft. Zoom was also propped by dodgy trading. Discord is still better.

angelwingsyt avatar
AngelWingsYT
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Discord is more reliable n easier to manage. Zoom is a bit tricky as random ppl can join easier be harder to kick out (as they already have the join code) and overall just a bit messy. Discord you can eaiser control who joins or not. Mute/deafen screen share but still show your face ect.

Load More Replies...
davenyc88 avatar
Dave P
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

actually Skype did very well during COVID and is still the number 1 used video f2f app. When ti comes to business and group, they are 2nd behind zoon, but ahead of go to meeting

lawrence_erik avatar
Erik Lawrence
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

They failed long before the pandemic, thats why when it hit, their main competitor was able to blow up and eat their lunch.... even though zoom is now falling just like peloton. Skype became complacent as the big dog... stopped innovating and improving, focused more on integrating into teams, and other MS apps.... people didnt like that. made them ripe for competition. for years and years.

eppetot avatar
sykes2477 avatar
SykesDaMan
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

It's a metaphor for being absent. "I wasn't there when he said it, I was in the bathroom!"

Load More Replies...
floyyt avatar
Paweł Duda
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Pretty much gone. 10 years ago it was obvious if you want to talk via internet, voice of video you used Skype, as everyone used Skype. It was standard. Now people use messenger, some WhatsApp, and some smaller communicators. They started their fall at time when small communicator used for contracts started weigh 300mb and later even 500mb, and seriously impacted performance of entire PC. Don't fix what is already good.

eglbukauskait avatar
PADNA
Community Member
1 year ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Slack was big in 2018 when we looked for a new communications means. Big bonus for MS teams was that we did not need a separate licence for it - came with office 360

Load More Replies...
sebastiannye avatar
sebastian nye
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

this easily the most poorly written boredpanda article i've ever tried to read

kushner3 avatar
Adrienne Kushner
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

If it wasn't for Skype, I couldn't see my 2 year-old grandaughter every day during the height of COVID. I have no problems with Skype.

easyreader50 avatar
Sharon Vaughn
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I could never get zoom to work for me. I still Skype with family.

damonhill avatar
Seadog
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I still use Skype by choice. I'm forced to use Teams at work and I can say Teams sucks compared to Skype.

quinn-farnand avatar
Quinn
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Or……facetime? Easier to handle, and to add people to it.

ashley-wells-75491 avatar
Ashley Wells
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

They died long before quarantine - it’s main user base switches to discord after Microsoft made Skype garbage

3rainbow avatar
EJN
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

So true! Skype just sort of crawled off to the corner of my computer and died!

chrisd avatar
Chris D
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

MS couldn't beat Skype, so they bought it (Lync had failed already). Skype replaced Lync, which later became Teams. Now its either Teams or Zoom.

izzycurer avatar
Izzy Curer
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I'm old, so when the lock down hit, the first thing I did was try to dig out my old Skype account. I couldn't get it to work for the life of me, so I ended up switching to something else.

bcgrote avatar
Brandy Grote
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I bought a smidge of Zoom stock at the start of the shut down. It tripled in price, so I sold off all but the original amount I had invested. It tripled again!

nickyoldfielddesciple avatar
IlovemydogShilo
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I always hated Skype. It was where I lived anyway always hard to connect to anybody and froze every couple of minutes and then always took longer than that to unfreeze meaning a call that would usually be only 15 minutes long last about 40 minutes. That's why we kept the calls so short . Thank God for face time and Whats App.

steveng27 avatar
Steve Griffin
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I think MS biggest problem is that they just won't advertise. ZOOM should NEVER have gotten even a toe-hold in video conferencing if MS had a real marketing campaign in the years leading up to COVID. But no, they expected business folks to line up because of what, word of mouth? The same thing happened with Windows Phone. Look, I carried WP from back in the 'PocketPC' days in 2000, to the last version of the big Nokia, finally letting go in 2018, and WP10 absolutely blew the doors off both Android and iPhone in terms of everything it could do and how well it did it. But Microsoft decided that all of that needed to be some kind of well-kept secret, so developers rightly embraced the other two. By the time MS started running a real advertising campaign for WP10, it was waaaayyy too late, and its fate was sealed. I still miss that WP10!

xmplry avatar
Bill Dolman
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Yup. MS Teams is touted by a great many government agencies since it's supposed to be "more secure". But it's simply more of a "dog". I've been in Zoom meetings with over 300 participants. And the meetings went just perfectly. I've never been in an MS Team meeting with more than 10 people in which Teams didn't get really, really buggy.

tobinkern avatar
Tobin Kern
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

To be fair... Zoom is a hot pile of dog s**t as well. So is MS Teams. My office uses Discord and its miles ahead of Zoom.

ctgcwrybqoyehqbfrt avatar
Monkey Spunk
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I know a couple of Devs on the Skype team (used to work with them), from general conversation it sounds like a bit of a mess over there.

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
ADVERTISEMENT
#13

They didn't bankrupt themselves but they made a major competitor...

Sony built a disk drive console prototype for Nintendo... But nintendo didn't see the point in having disc media.. So sony created playstation, since they already invented the technology.

Skrillamane Report

Add photo comments
POST
cybermerlin2000 avatar
cybermerlin2000
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I remember that. I bought one of the first playstations to roll out and into shops. I also had a super nintendo which had an expansion slot in the back ready for CD rom games that never got used

View more commentsArrow down menu
#14

My Pillow's CEO is quickly running his company into the ground as we speak...

Physical-Ad-3798 Report

Add photo comments
POST
jmchoto avatar
Jo Choto
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I just can't bring myself to support businesses that are owned or run by people with really bad ethics.

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#15

I got a fun one. You know how on shark tank they always introduce Kevin O'Leary as having made his fortune selling a educational games company?

He single handedly killed the learning games industry (those Carmen san Diego type games that were real popular in the early 00's) by forcing the devs to churn them out faster and cheaper at the cost of quality, slowly killing the market, and he also nearly bankrupted Mattel when they acquired his company.

SorosBuxlaundromat Report

Add photo comments
POST
ohxrkqra avatar
Kira Okah
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Friend of mine was hit by this personally, her parents were learning and educational games devs. Demanded too much for nowhere near enough time and money and they had to switch jobs or burnout.

View more commentsArrow down menu
#16

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later Quiznos.

Corporate office decided to buy the vendors, and then contract all of the franchises to only buy materials from Corporate with a price hike.

The margins got way too high and all of the stores went out of business. They shot themselves straight in the foot.

JoshBobJovi , flickr Report

ADVERTISEMENT
See Also on Bored Panda
#17

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later Nokia. Never made the transition to smartphone, now it's as good as dead.

[deleted] Report

Add photo comments
POST
jameskramer avatar
James016
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I had one of their first Lumia smart phones, it was decent for the time.

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#18

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later Yahoo bought Tumblr for $1.1 billion and sold it for $3 million 6 years later

fork_hands_mcmike , pexels Report

Add photo comments
POST
ohxrkqra avatar
Kira Okah
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

They lost money not because it was overpriced in the first place but because they trashed it. Would have been worth what they paid otherwise.

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#19

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later Barnes and Noble. They just kept making bigger stores with less and less books.

RagnarDann3skj0ld , flickr Report

Add photo comments
POST
steffen_rehm avatar
Steffen Rehm
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I hate that. Bookstores has to be filled with books in every corner of the shop. Maybe its just me, but i see bookstores as a darker but comfy place to spend hours in it, searching for new stuff to read.

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#20

Toys R Us. Toys R Us was actually doing fine. It was venture capitalists going in and loading TRU with debt to make it look like it was losing money. Victim of the game.

679 points 5 months ago To Report

#21

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later Kodak completely went under when they chose not to adopt digital photography. They eventually came back several years later, somehow.

thehankinato , pexels Report

Add photo comments
POST
stefanscheiben avatar
The Scout
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Ironic when you take into account that the first digital camera actually was invented by a Kodak engineer, and Kodak also were the first to ever build a digital SLR camera in 1987. So they really were the main contributors to the development (pardon the pun) that shoot them in the foot.

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#22

I haven't seen Theranos mentioned, but holy hell that was one bad decision after another.

It all stemmed from the founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes who had the honestly admirable goal of wanting to run a bunch of blood tests using a single drop of blood.

Unfortunately, reality got in the way and they learned that it turns out you need well over a drop of blood for any blood test to be accurate.

Holmes (she's comes across as a complete narcissist) refused to budge on the requirement and basically fired anyone who told her that what she wanted was impossible.

Despite being once valued at over $1B, the company never once produced a reliable product, is now competent defunct, and the founder is facing criminal charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud as well as a class action civil suit.

cmaronchick Report

#23

Hoover UK free airline ticket disaster.

I remember this at the time. They tried to make it as difficult as possible to claim the flights, the idea being people would likely buy an expensive Hoover, not fulfil the criteria properly (or just never take the flight) and they'd be in profit. They underestimated how focussed British people will be to get free stuff. People would buy the cheapest thing they could to qualify, send all the forms off perfectly, then try to take legal action when the free flights didn't happen.

sludgemonkey01 , helic0n3 Report

Add photo comments
POST
1billanderson avatar
Firkin Dirkin
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

And Hoover then hired a company to stop people claiming their flights by offering you a flight from an airport least accessable by you to an airport hours from the hotel. They were caught on video doing it but the goverment refused to act on what was a clear case of consumer fraud. Those political party donations do work...

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#24

Cracked. Basically they fired all of their writers at once. The site also became practically unusable towards the ends as well. I could barely get it to load long enough to read the article.

Duck_quacker Report

Add photo comments
POST
jacobbrian15 avatar
Black nigha
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I really loved cracked they actually had articles back in the day good articles

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#25

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later Ayds diet candy.

They didn’t change their name after the emergence of the AIDS virus.

NoSoul2335 , flickr Report

#26

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later In 2012, after a three-year hiatus in the sport, F1 team Lotus signed driver Kimi Raikkonen for the 2012 season.

His contract included a clause that stated that Raikonnen would earn 50,000 euros for every point he scored in the two seasons of his contract.

Raikonnen then went on to finish third in the 2012 championship, and 5th in the 2013 season, which was exceptionally impressive for Lotus.

In doing this, he got 390 points in two seasons, and Lotus had to pay him 50,000 euros for each point, so he earned 19.5 million euros off of that bonus alone, which lead to Lotus almost filing for bankruptcy.

Aimaan-Zakaria , wikimedia Report

Add photo comments
POST
troux avatar
Troux
Community Member
2 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

For those unfamiliar, Kimi Raikkonen is a legendary interviewee. Sensible, laconic and forever annoyed at the fact that he has to answer inane questions about his job after doing his job. Samples: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fd-Df9EYoQY

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
See Also on Bored Panda
#27

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later Photobucket changing its tos back in 2017 to require a yearly fee for all those images you previously posted on it for free.

drizzes , pexels Report

Add photo comments
POST
levpertsov avatar
Loty
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Once you give something out for free it's very very hard to make people pay for it.

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#28

30 Of The Stupidest Decisions Made By Companies That Made Them Regret It Later It did not bankrupt them by any stretch, but 30 years ago McDonalds started selling pizza. They invested millions and it crashed and burned spectacularly.

The reason McDonalds started selling fresh-baked muffins is they had to do something with the pizza ovens.

CohibaVancouver , flickr Report

#29

Schlitz. Throughout the '60s they were one of America's biggest national beers, a tough competitor to Budweiser and Pabst. They hired a new CEO, from within, in about 1974 or so who was greatly enamored of a study which showed that about 30% or so of beer drinkers couldn't distinguish their putatively favorite beer from other brands in taste test ... so why, he asked, are we spending so much money making our beer so distinctive when it doesn't matter to our customers? He oversaw the introduction of a slimmer brewing process that included replacing barley with corn syrup and using silica gel as a preservative during the brewing process that they would then filter out afterwards, i.e. they wouldn't have to disclose it as an ingredient. What they got was a beer that spoiled faster, grew cloudy on racks, didn't produce a nice frothy head when poured, was perceived as flavorless and eventually required that they recall about 10 million bottles.

Oh, and then they didn't realize that light beer was going to become a thing, so they got their clock cleaned by Bud and Miller in that segment. And they ran an ad campaign in which some belligerent-sounding guy only half-jokingly (it seemed) threatened to kill the guy talking to him off-camera if he took his Schlitz away.

By the early 1980s they went back to how they had once brewed their beer, but the damage was done and they had to sell out to Stroh's. I barely see much of that one around and it's been years since I saw any Schlitz on the racks.

SniffleBot Report

Add photo comments
POST
jmchoto avatar
Jo Choto
Community Member
2 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The popular American beer brands are absolutely disgusting. They all taste like vaguely fizzy sour water.

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu
#30

YouTube's choice to require Google+ to comment at one point was a really bad time for them.

cringyfrick Report

Add photo comments
POST
j_f_ avatar
J. F.
Community Member
2 years ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

YouTube's latest ideas will give them bad times again, like removing the dislike button (fixed with add-ons), playing two unskippable ads with 15 seconds each one after another (fixed with add-ons) and the requirement to send full legal documents to verify the age for users from the EU (the EU's fault not theirs).

View More Replies...
View more commentsArrow down menu

Note: this post originally had 66 images. It’s been shortened to the top 30 images based on user votes.