Why Kodak Failed and What Entrepreneurs Can Learn
Kodak dominated the photographic film market for nearly a century. At its peak in the 1990s, Kodak held an astounding 90% market share and was one of the world’s top 5 most valuable brands. But when digital photography began disrupting the industry in the late 90s, Kodak failed to adapt in time. The company filed for bankruptcy in 2012.
Kodak’s fall from grace offers important lessons for entrepreneurs on complacency, lack of vision, and failure to innovate.
Kodak’s History of Innovation
Kodak was founded by George Eastman in 1888. His first camera used film made of paper that was coated with a light-sensitive chemical emulsion. This made photography accessible to the masses for the first time.
Kodak was known for its slogan “You press the button, we do the rest.” This summed up its convenient and affordable products. Customers simply needed to take pictures and return the camera to Kodak, which would process the film and reload the camera.
Kodak heavily invested in R&D. It produced many groundbreaking innovations like:
- Roll films in transparent celluloid and acetate bases
- 16mm color motion picture film
- Kodachrome color film
- Ektachrome color transparency film
- Carousel slide projector
By 1976, Kodak had captured an incredible 90% market share of the US film market and 85% of camera sales. The 35mm camera transformed photography into a mass market phenomenon.
Kodak became complacent with its seemingly unassailable dominance of the photography industry.
Missing the Digital Disruption
In 1975, one of Kodak’s own engineers, Steve Sasson, invented the first digital camera. It was bulky, weighing 8 pounds. It could only take 0.01 megapixel black and white images and took 23 seconds per exposure.
Fearing digital photography would cannibalize its lucrative film business, Kodak kept the digital camera under wraps. Kodak failed to realize how fast digital technology would improve and become adopted.
By the mid-90s, digital cameras were getting much better and cheaper. When digital photography went mainstream in the early 2000s, it wrecked Kodak’s core business model. People no longer needed films and prints. Kodak wasn’t prepared for this rapid shift and couldn’t compete with digital-native companies like Canon and Nikon.
Key Reasons for Kodak’s Downfall
Kodak failed for several interrelated reasons:
Complacency
Kodak sat comfortably at the top of the photography world for about a century. It thought its domination of the film market would continue indefinitely. Kodak’s fat profit margins blinded it to looming threats on the horizon. It failed to imagine a world without photographic films.
Lack of Vision
Kodak invented the core technology of digital photography but lacked the vision to harness its potential. It focused too much on protecting its film revenues instead of adapting to the digital future. Clinging to the status quo often causes incumbents to miss disruptive innovations in their industry.
Failure to Innovate
Kodak stumbled because it depended on its traditional strengths for too long. It failed to reimagine itself into a digital company. Kodak needed bolder innovation and transformation, not incremental improvements. Changing consumer behavior demanded a fundamentally disruptive shift, not minor tweaks.
Bureaucracy
Kodak’s large size and hierarchy made it slow to adapt. Its bureaucratic culture with multiple layers of management drowned out voices advocating change. Maintaining the status quo was easier than re-inventing itself. Internal politics and infighting distracted Kodak.
Arrogance
In its heyday, the Kodak brand was so powerful that the company didn’t take competitors seriously. Kodak failed to recognize that no company is immune to disruption. It dismissed the threat of digital, calling it a “cute” niche area. Kodak’s arrogance blinded it until it was too late.
Key Takeaways for Entrepreneurs
Kodak’s mistakes offer several learning opportunities for entrepreneurs and startups:
- Be paranoid: No matter how successful you are, always watch out for new innovations that could make your company obsolete. Assume disruption is around the corner.
- Focus on the future: Don’t get blinded by current successes. Build new capabilities before you need them, to prepare for the future. Make bold bets on future trends.
- Promote innovation: Encourage a culture of innovation, not complacency. Challenge assumptions. Run small experiments on the side to test new ideas.
- Embrace disruption: Don’t fear internal innovation – it’s better to disrupt yourself than let a competitor do it. Be willing to cannibalize your cash cows.
- Keep start-up energy: As you scale, maintain urgency and agility. Avoid stifling bureaucracy. Listen to dissenting voices and the marketplace.
Kodak’s downfall was far from inevitable. With more vision and foresight, Kodak could have preempted its disruption. Instead, it remains a cautionary example of how market leaders can quickly crater. Entrepreneurs should remember that no company stays on top forever. Only the paranoid survive.