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181| Businesses Don’t Fail, They Commit Suicide with Larry Mandelberg

An episode of the Million Dollar Flip Flops podcast, hosted by Rodric Lenhart, titled "181| Businesses Don’t Fail, They Commit Suicide with Larry Mandelberg" was published on March 17, 2026 and runs 34 minutes.

March 17, 2026 ·34m · Million Dollar Flip Flops

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Episode: Businesses Don’t Fail, They Commit Suicide with Larry Mandelberg

In this episode of Million Dollar Flip Flops, Rodric sits down with Larry Mandelberg — 5th-generation entrepreneur, author of Businesses Don’t Fail, They Commit Suicide, and advisor to leadership teams who are “struggling with success.”

Larry has spent decades studying why organizations actually fail, doing 23 years of primary research, 6 years of proof-of-concept, and running 13 businesses across retail, wholesale, tech, clothing, and more. Now he helps leadership teams navigate growth, change, and the chaos that comes with success.

Together, they dig into:

  1. 👨‍👦 Multi-generational business: from hides & furs in 1850 to Larry’s machine shop roots
  2. 🔍 The question that started it all: “Why do businesses fail?”
  3. 🧪 23 years of research → a simple, usable framework for organizational failure
  4. 🚗 Lessons from the automotive/machine world:
  5. Why the customer is NOT always right
  6. Why most people confuse symptoms with root causes
  7. The importance of looking at the whole system, not just the obvious problem
  8. 📏 The three levels of organizational maturity:
  9. Youth – narrow & shallow experience
  10. Adolescence – narrow & deep
  11. Adulthood – broad & deep
  12. 💣 The #1 reason young organizations fail: lack of clarity of purpose
  13. 🎯 Why “We build houses” is NOT a purpose — and how that kills alignment
  14. 🧲 Hiring for skill vs hiring for shared purpose & values
  15. 🧠 How to define a purpose bigger than one person (true BHAGs):
  16. “Change the way education works in this country”
  17. “Become the model for sustainable agriculture”
  18. 🧑‍🤝‍🧑 How clarity of purpose changes:
  19. Who you attract
  20. How you recruit
  21. How you retain people who actually care
  22. 🧱 Why so many “labor problems” are actually purpose & marketing problems
  23. 🧮 Profit as outcome, not purpose:
  24. Why Larry avoids companies driven only by quarterly returns
  25. Autonomy as a key filter (public markets vs independent organizations)
  26. 📉 A real client story:
  27. 20 years of profits → first loss ever
  28. Two consecutive losing years
  29. On track to lose $800k in year three
  30. What changed when leadership finally addressed the real issues
  31. 🧭 Corporate lifecycle theory & why businesses are as predictable as human aging
  32. 🌍 Larry’s move to Bordeaux, France and what it looks like to live with intentional purpose
  33. 🧾 Why most people never really believe their plans will happen — and how that’s different when you operate with clarity

If you’ve ever said “we just can’t find good people” or “we’re growing but it feels like hell,” this episode is going to sting a little—in a good way.


🔑 Key Takeaways

  1. If your people don’t share a clear purpose, they’re working at cross-purposes.
  2. Energy gets wasted, alignment collapses, and growth feels like friction.
  3. Most “problems” are misdiagnosed.
  4. You think it’s hiring. It might actually be marketing. You think it’s the employee. It’s usually the system.
  5. Stop recruiting for skill first.
  6. Hire people who are excited by your purpose and aligned with your values; then teach them the tactical skills.
  7. Your purpose must be bigger than any one person.
  8. BHAG-level goals pull the right people in and keep them there.
  9. Profit is essential, but it isn’t the purpose.
  10. Long-term, healthy businesses are built to deliver value, not just hit a quarterly number.
  11. Businesses, like humans, follow a predictable lifecycle.
  12. If you know the pattern, you can anticipate problems instead of being surprised by them.


⏱ Suggested Timestamps

0:00 – “If the people in your organization don’t have clarity of purpose…”

0:28 – Intro – Million Dollar Flip Flops

1:00 – Meet Larry: “non-recovering serial entrepreneur” helping leadership teams

1:45 – Family history: 1850 hides & furs → 5th-gen Mandelberg business lineage

2:30 – The question that started it all: why do businesses fail?

3:15 – 23 years of research + 6 years of proof-of-concept

3:45 – 13 businesses later: what Larry learned across industries

4:15 – Rodric’s background & shared obsession with business survival

4:45 – Larry in Bordeaux, France & the path there

5:20 – Lessons from the machine shop & automotive world

5:50 – Why “the customer is always wrong” (in the way they define the problem)

6:30 – Symptoms vs root causes: the car won’t start example

7:10 – Simple vs complex problems & why we must keep searching for better answers

7:45 – Rodric: builders, B players, and how “hiring problems” are really marketing problems

8:40 – All business is math; marketing is math

9:20 – Who Larry works with: demographic filters & target market

10:00 – Desire for sustainability & leadership thinking beyond themselves

10:40 – Multi-layer management vs cult of personality

11:05 – Why he avoids companies dependent on retail revenue

11:40 – Autonomy: why public-company pressure changes everything

12:20 – Typical client profile: successful, stuck, or “struggling with success”

13:00 – Case study: 20-year-old company, first loss ever, on track to lose $800k

13:40 – What changed during the 8-month engagement

14:30 – How leadership change allowed the company to reset

15:00 – Sponsor: Million Dollar Flip Flops book & foundation

16:00 – Rodric shares his programs & the “business problems = people problems” lens

18:00 – The 3 levels of organizational maturity: youth, adolescence, adulthood

19:00 – The #1 reason young orgs fail: lack of clarity of purpose

19:45 – Why “we build houses” is not a purpose

20:30 – Test: ask 5 people in your company for your purpose and compare answers

21:00 – How misaligned purposes cause people to work at cross purposes

21:30 – Stop recruiting for skill; start recruiting through shared purpose & big goals

22:15 – Examples

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