INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IGNITION: HOW MICHAEL EISNER UNLOCKED A VAULT NOBODY ELSE COULD SEE — AND THEN LOCKED HIMSELF INSIDE IT episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 23, 2026 · 8 MIN

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IGNITION: HOW MICHAEL EISNER UNLOCKED A VAULT NOBODY ELSE COULD SEE — AND THEN LOCKED HIMSELF INSIDE IT

from The Stagnation Assassin Show · host Todd Hagopian

Send us Fan MailIn 1984, Disney was worth $1.8 billion and bleeding relevance. No defining animated films. Underpriced parks. Corporate raiders circling for the kill. One man arrived, saw assets nobody else was valuing correctly, and over the next decade turned $1.8 billion into $22 billion. Then he spent the second decade systematically dismantling everything he'd built. Both acts are getting dissected today.This isn't a tribute. This is a forensic audit.In this episode, Todd breaks down:Why Disney in 1984 scored 8 out of 10 on the Corporate Cancer Scale — and why the disease wasn't a capability problem, it was a permission problem: executives so paralyzed by reverence for Walt's legacy they couldn't make a single bold decisionThe IP unlocking strategy that generated hundreds of millions in pure-margin revenue from inventory already created and paid for — the 80/20 Matrix applied to a legacy asset: identify the vault generating zero marginal cost and open the doorThe pricing lesson every operator needs to hear: if your product has a waiting list, your price is wrong — and how Eisner raised Disney park prices systematically without losing material attendanceThe Karelin Method applied to creative output: how mandating an 18-month animation cadence instead of a four-year cycle produced The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, and The Lion King — because the Disney Renaissance was as much an operational decision as a creative oneThe Murder Board: how the Katzenberg succession decision became one of the most catastrophic leadership errors in entertainment history — and how the man who drove the entire animation machine walked out the door and founded Disney's most significant animated competitor for the next two decadesThe Ovitz $109 million severance, the Euro Disney $920 million first-year loss, and the structural collapse that happens when a leader stops rebuilding the team architecture that made him effective in the first placeWhy a leader without a strong number two stops getting better — and why filling that vacuum with less capable allies is how organizations decay from the inside while the CEO becomes more controllingKILL RATING: 3 out of 5 Kills.First decade earns 5. Second decade earns 1. Averaged out, Eisner lands at 3 — a genuinely brilliant value-unlocking operator whose second act proves that unlocking value and institutionalizing value creation are two entirely different capabilities. Study him for IP monetization, pricing psychology, and creative cadence. Study him as a cautionary tale for talent succession, governance discipline, and the danger of removing the structural constraints that made you great.📚 Grab your copy of The Unfair Advantage: Weaponizing the Hypomanic Toolbox — https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FV6QMWBX🌐 Visit ToddHagopian.com and StagnationAssassins.com for frameworks, masterclasses, and more.🎯 Declare WAR on Stagnation.The Stagnation Assassin Show | Todd Hagopian | 10-minute episodes. Battle-tested strategies. Zero fluff.

Send us Fan Mail In 1984, Disney was worth $1.8 billion and bleeding relevance. No defining animated films. Underpriced parks. Corporate raiders circling for the kill. One man arrived, saw assets nobody else was valuing correctly, and over the next decade turned $1.8 billion into $22 billion. Then he spent the second decade systematically dismantling everything he'd built. Both acts are getting dissected today. This isn't a tribute. This is a forensic audit. In this episode, Todd breaks down:...

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INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IGNITION: HOW MICHAEL EISNER UNLOCKED A VAULT NOBODY ELSE COULD SEE — AND THEN LOCKED HIMSELF INSIDE IT

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Send us Fan MailIn 1984, Disney was worth $1.8 billion and bleeding relevance. No defining animated films. Underpriced parks. Corporate raiders circling for the kill. One man arrived, saw assets nobody else was valuing correctly, and over the next...

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