Building an Incorruptible Company that Lasts with Eric Ries, Author of Incorruptible & The Lean Startup - Ep 78

It’s not every day that you get to have one of the most important thinkers in the startup world on your podcast, but for The Transaction, that day is today.

Eric Ries is a Founder and the renowned business author of The Lean Startup and his brand new book, Incorruptible: Why Good Companies Go Bad…and How Great Companies Stay Great.

Eric joins Craig Rosenberg and returning guest host Scott Albro to discuss the forces that make companies vulnerable to destruction from within and without. Then he offers solutions that safeguard against them for the long-term.

Incorruptible is the blueprint for companies that will prosper and endure without losing their soul. 

Plus, Eric shares how go-to-market teams, in their unique market-facing position, can make a profound impact on customer trust, both positively or negatively.

Also, Craig describes his current deodorant situation, Scott mentioned the looming ARR creative accounting crisis, and Producer Sam mentions the link to Eric’s book in the show notes below. 

Critical Takeaways
  • Trust is the force that lowers friction, reduces costs, increases velocity, and makes customers stick around even when a company makes mistakes. By keeping their promises to customers, sales and marketing teams create long-term enterprise value by adding to the company’s trust account.
  • A strong customer promise is not enough unless a company’s incentives, reporting, governance, and business model are built to defend it and deliver value to the customer.
  • Corruption often looks like optimization in the moment. Eric defines corruption as “the making of money without the creation of value,” which many ‘best practices’ often encourage. Overpromising product capabilities, manipulating ARR, squeezing customer trust for quota, or turning a beloved product into an ad-clogged mess may improve a metric temporarily, but it destroys the value engine underneath.
  • Go-to-market sits at the edge of the company’s moral logic. The GTM team is the “pointiest point at the edge of the spear” because it’s how the market experiences the company’s promises first. For example, revenue leaders are not just responsible for pipeline; they are responsible for making sure the promises used to create pipeline are believable, durable, and backed by the product and business model.
  • Governance is not bureaucracy; it’s how a company protects what makes it worth building. 

Chapters
00:00 - Episode Preview
02:25 - Introducing Eric Ries, Author of The Lean Startup & Incorruptible
06:09 - The Legacy of The Lean Startup in the AI Age
08:59 - The Business Lessons Learned from Sol Price’s Journey of Founding FedMart & Price Club
18:39 -     How Founding The Long-Term Stock Exchange Showed The Limits of Best Practices & Conventional Thinking
24:03 -    How Businesses Cash in Trust & How They Build Trust with Customers
27:54 -  Why Re-examining OKRs & GTM Metrics Can Improve the Long-Term Health of a Company
35:06 - The Looming Crisis in How Startups are Accounting their Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) 
40:10 -   Why & When Early Stage Startups Need To Seriously Think About Governance

Join our Newsletter to never miss an episode & get bonus content: https://thetransaction.substack.com/

Epic Quotes
  • “ Trust is the asset that compounds.” - Eric Ries
  • “ A lot of these so-called best practices are actually value destroying.” - Eric Ries

Connect with Eric 

Shoutouts

Love the show? Give us a shoutout on LinkedIn and tell us what you loved!

Creators and Guests

Craig Rosenberg
Host
Craig Rosenberg
I help b2b companies grow revenue by enabling GTM excellence. Chief Platform Officer at Scale Venture Partners
Matt Amundson
Host
Matt Amundson
CMO, Advisor, Data-Driven Revenue Leader. Chief Marketing Officer of Census
Sam Guertin
Producer
Sam Guertin
Podcast Producer & B2B Content Marketer at Sam Guertin Productions
Building an Incorruptible Company that Lasts with Eric Ries, Author of Incorruptible & The Lean Startup - Ep 78
Broadcast by