In 1962, a young salesman at IBM hit his annual sales quota in just two weeks. He spent the rest of the year looking for ways to improve how customers used technology.
IBM wasn't interested. The company was printing money. Why change?
So he quit.
In 1962, a young salesman at IBM hit his annual sales quota in just two weeks. He spent the rest of the year looking for ways to improve how customers used technology.
IBM wasn't interested. The company was printing money. Why change?
So he quit.
That salesman was Ross Perot.
He started Electronic Data Systems from a small office in Dallas and pioneered outsourced IT services. In 1984, General Motors acquired EDS for $2.5 billion.
Many industry-changing companies aren't started by people who hate incumbents. They're started by people inside incumbents who see opportunities the company is too successful to care about.
That's why AI is so dangerous for large organizations.
The threat isn't that startups have more resources. It's that startups don't have legacy revenue to protect.
Every time someone says "We've always done it this way," a future competitor is being created.
The next billion-dollar AI company is probably being built by someone who got tired of hearing "no."
This pattern repeats throughout business history. The people who build transformative companies often come from the very industries they disrupt. They see the gaps. They know the customer pain points. And when leadership won't listen, they leave.
Large organizations have to ask themselves: are we protecting today's revenue at the cost of tomorrow's relevance? The skills that define successful careers are shifting fast.
If you're in a position where you keep hearing "no" to ideas you believe in, that frustration might be pointing somewhere important.