Eric Ries: Why Good Tech Companies Go Bad, and How to Stop It episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 1, 2026 · 1H

Eric Ries: Why Good Tech Companies Go Bad, and How to Stop It

from Tech Lead Journal · host Henry Suryawirawan

Why do companies with the best intentions end up betraying their customers, employees, and mission? Eric Ries calls it “financial gravity” — an invisible force that pulls even the most principled companies toward corruption, and understanding it is the first step to resisting it.In this episode, Eric Ries, entrepreneur and author of The Lean Startup and Incorruptible, shares why building a great company isn’t just about having a strong vision — it’s about building structures that protect that vision from external pressure. Eric revisits the core ideas behind the Lean Startup and MVP, explaining how the purpose of a minimum viable product is not to ship fast but to learn fast. He then introduces the central thesis of his new book: that the corruption we see in companies isn’t caused by bad people, but by a financial system that pulls organizations away from their values. Drawing on stories of Sol Price, FedMart, Costco, HEB, Novo Nordisk, and Anthropic, he shows that incorruptible companies are built through a combination of ethos — a deep operational commitment to doing right — and structural governance that resists outside pressure. He also unpacks how false metrics like OKRs can hollow out a company’s integrity over time, and how Mary Parker Follett’s concept of the “invisible leader” helps culture survive beyond any single founder or CEO.Key topics discussed:What “financial gravity” is and why even good companies fall to itThe true purpose of an MVP (hint: it’s not about shipping fast)Why OKRs become dangerous false proxies over timeBlueprint for building a truly incorruptible companyWhy Costco and Novo Nordisk resisted forces that killed FedMartMary Parker Follett’s invisible leader explainedWhy Anthropic’s structure gives it a lasting competitive edgeHow everyday decisions become acts of systemic changeTimestamps:(00:00) Trailer & Intro(02:31) What Two Mega-Trends Make Lean Startup More Relevant Than Ever?(04:03) What Is the True Purpose of a Minimum Viable Product?(11:04) Has AI Actually Made Building Software Cheaper and Better?(13:41) What Two Stories Inspired the Book Incorruptible?(20:38) What Is Financial Gravity and Why Does It Corrupt Even Good Companies?(26:29) What Is Surrogation and Why Do OKRs Become Dangerous False Proxies?(29:55) What Is the Blueprint for Building an Incorruptible Company?(33:53) What Is the Invisible Leader and How Does It Keep Company Culture Alive?(39:56) What Governance Structures Can Shield a Company’s Mission from Financial Gravity?(48:27) Why Does Anthropic’s Unique Structure Give It a Competitive Advantage in AI?(51:43) 3 Tech Lead Wisdom_____Eric Ries’s BioOver the last two decades, Eric Ries’s ideas about continuous innovation, long-term thinking, governance, and market reform have reshaped company building and management practices. He is the creator of the Lean Startup method, and the author of the New York Times bestseller The Lean Startup; The Leader’s Guide; and The Startup Way.As a founder, he has put his own ideas into practice with The Long-Term Stock Exchange (LTSE); Answer.AI, an AI R&D lab; Virgil, a legal services startup; and IMVU. On The Eric Ries Show, he talks with world-class technologists, thought leaders, and executives building for the long-term. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife and three children.Follow Eric:LinkedIn – linkedin.com/in/eriesX – x.com/ericriesPodcast – www.ericriesshow.comWebsite – incorruptible.coNewsletter – news.theleanstartup.comLike this episode?Show notes & transcript: techleadjournal.dev/episodes/259.Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram.Buy me a coffee or become a patron.

Why do companies with the best intentions end up betraying their customers, employees, and mission? Eric Ries calls it “financial gravity” — an invisible force that pulls even the most principled companies toward corruption, and understanding it is the first step to resisting it.In this episode, Eric Ries, entrepreneur and author of The Lean Startup and Incorruptible, shares why building a great company isn’t just about having a strong vision — it’s about building structures that protect that vision from external pressure. Eric revisits the core ideas behind the Lean Startup and MVP, explaining how the purpose of a minimum viable product is not to ship fast but to learn fast. He then introduces the central thesis of his new book: that the corruption we see in companies isn’t caused by bad people, but by a financial system that pulls organizations away from their values. Drawing on stories of Sol Price, FedMart, Costco, HEB, Novo Nordisk, and Anthropic, he shows that incorruptible companies are built through a combination of ethos — a deep operational commitment to doing right — and structural governance that resists outside pressure. He also unpacks how false metrics like OKRs can hollow out a company’s integrity over time, and how Mary Parker Follett’s concept of the “invisible leader” helps culture survive beyond any single founder or CEO.Key topics discussed:What “financial gravity” is and why even good companies fall to itThe true purpose of an MVP (hint: it’s not about shipping fast)Why OKRs become dangerous false proxies over timeBlueprint for building a truly incorruptible companyWhy Costco and Novo Nordisk resisted forces that killed FedMartMary Parker Follett’s invisible leader explainedWhy Anthropic’s structure gives it a lasting competitive edgeHow everyday decisions become acts of systemic changeTimestamps:(00:00) Trailer & Intro(02:31) What Two Mega-Trends Make Lean Startup More Relevant Than Ever?(04:03) What Is the True Purpose of a Minimum Viable Product?(11:04) Has AI Actually Made Building Software Cheaper and Better?(13:41) What Two Stories Inspired the Book Incorruptible?(20:38) What Is Financial Gravity and Why Does It Corrupt Even Good Companies?(26:29) What Is Surrogation and Why Do OKRs Become Dangerous False Proxies?(29:55) What Is the Blueprint for Building an Incorruptible Company?(33:53) What Is the Invisible Leader and How Does It Keep Company Culture Alive?(39:56) What Governance Structures Can Shield a Company’s Mission from Financial Gravity?(48:27) Why Does Anthropic’s Unique Structure Give It a Competitive Advantage in AI?(51:43) 3 Tech Lead Wisdom_____Eric Ries’s BioOver the last two decades, Eric Ries’s ideas about continuous innovation, long-term thinking, governance, and market reform have reshaped company building and management practices. He is the creator of the Lean Startup method, and the author of the New York Times bestseller The Lean Startup; The Leader’s Guide; and The Startup Way.As a founder, he has put his own ideas into practice with The Long-Term Stock Exchange (LTSE); Answer.AI, an AI R&D lab; Virgil, a legal services startup; and IMVU. On The Eric Ries Show, he talks with world-class technologists, thought leaders, and executives building for the long-term. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife and three children.Follow Eric:LinkedIn – linkedin.com/in/eriesX – x.com/ericriesPodcast – www.ericriesshow.comWebsite – incorruptible.coNewsletter – news.theleanstartup.comLike this episode?Show notes & transcript: techleadjournal.dev/episodes/259.Follow @techleadjournal on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram.Buy me a coffee or become a patron.

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Why do companies with the best intentions end up betraying their customers, employees, and mission? Eric Ries calls it “financial gravity” — an invisible force that pulls even the most principled companies toward corruption, and understanding it is...

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