ISBN-13: 9783565264247 / Angielski / Miękka / 100 str.
The Ford Edsel was supposed to be the ultimate car. Ford spent ten years and $250 million (billions today) on market research. They polled thousands of people. They analyzed every demographic. They used the best science of the 1950s. And then they launched a car that nobody wanted, with a grille that people said looked like a toilet seat."The Grill of Disaster" is the definitive autopsy of the biggest product launch failure in corporate history. It dissects why asking customers what they want often leads to disaster, the dangers of design-by-committee, and the hubris of thinking you can engineer desire. It is a timeless lesson for modern startups: Data can tell you everything about the past, but it cannot predict whether people will laugh at your product.
They did all the research. They spent all the money. And they built a car that looked like a toilet seat and named it after a dead accountant.