Fourteen years ago at the blog: the "a pervasive fetish" line actually holds up better today than it did then
West Coast Stat Views (on Observational Epidemiology and more) 2025-10-15
From "The Rot-Com Bubble" by Ed Zitron.
The noxious growth-at-all-costs mindset of the Rot Economy sits at the core of every issue that I've ever written about. It’s the force that drives businesses to grow bigger rather than better, making more products to conquer more markets rather than making products or services that people need or improving products they already like.
...
This belief — that exponential growth is not just a reasonable expectation, but a requirement — is central to the core rot in the tech industry, and as these rapacious demands run into reality, the Rot-Com bubble has begun to deflate. As we speak, the tech industry is grappling with a mid-life crisis where it desperately searches for the next hyper-growth market, eagerly pushing customers and businesses to adopt technology that nobody asked for in the hopes that they can keep the Rot Economy alive.
The Rot Economy and tech's growth-lust isn't new. Venture capital has been incentivizing and monetizing the rot for over a decade, with Marc Andreessen advocating in 2011 that we should look to "expand the number of innovative new software companies created" rather than "constantly questioning their valuations." Yet, just one year earlier in March 2010, his partner Ben Horowitz advocated for "fat startups," saying that you "can't save your way to winning the market," and that "startup purgatory" is when you "don't go bankrupt, but you fail to build the number one product in the space" and have "zero chance of becoming a high-growth company," which Horowitz describes as "worse than startup hell" because you're "stuck with the small company," even if it's cash-flow positive.
At the time, it made sense — even if there’s something inherently abnormal about describing a stable, profitable company as being in a state that’s “worse than hell.”
Speaking of 2011...
Thursday, September 15, 2011
The Growth Fetish