are always founded by creative entrepreneurs but eventually the founder dies or gets pushed out, or moves on to something else. Inevitably the businesspeople take over-the managers- and they focus on preserving the vision that made the company great in the first place. They don't have any creative ideas themselves and they end up surrounding themselves instead with analysts and accountants to try to control the creative people and cut costs. In the process, they discourage change and new initiatives and reinvention. In time, the company begins to ossify and atrophy and die. It's important to have financial parameters and never to bet the house. But in a creative business you also have to be willing to take chances and even to fail sometimes, because otherwise nothing innovative is ever going to happen. If your'e only comfortable running a business by the numbers, I can understand that. But then you shouldn't get involved with a creatively driven company like Disney".
Work In Progress, Michael Eisner.
These were Michael Eisner's words to the Disney Board of Directors as he was trying to convince, or sell himself, to be Chairman and CEO of the Walt Disney Company in 1984.
Don't you think that these words hold great truth?
Who do you think would be the best creative person to take the helm after Bob Iger's departure? Who is the best executive out there who could infuse some creativity into the Disney company?
Let's not get into personal opinions about Eisner but concentrate on the quote and the question of who would be a worthy creative successor to Iger.
Work In Progress, Michael Eisner.
These were Michael Eisner's words to the Disney Board of Directors as he was trying to convince, or sell himself, to be Chairman and CEO of the Walt Disney Company in 1984.
Don't you think that these words hold great truth?
Who do you think would be the best creative person to take the helm after Bob Iger's departure? Who is the best executive out there who could infuse some creativity into the Disney company?
Let's not get into personal opinions about Eisner but concentrate on the quote and the question of who would be a worthy creative successor to Iger.