Management
Patagonia closed its headquarters and all 29 of its U.S. stores on Election Day 2016 and paid every one of its roughly 2,000 employees for the day off — then closed the company for every general election that followed, co-founded a coalition that now spans more than 2,000 employers, and in 2024 moved the closure to early-voting day
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 24, 2026
Costco enforces a $1.50 hot dog and soda combo price set in 1985 — when then-CEO Craig Jelinek once suggested raising it, co-founder Jim Sinegal reportedly told him he would personally kill him if the price changed, and the chain absorbs the loss as a customer loyalty cost across more than 900 warehouses worldwide
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 24, 2026
When Nintendo released the Game Boy in April 1989 with a monochrome screen against the color Sega Game Gear and Atari Lynx, designer Gunpei Yokoi argued the lower-resolution display would give players 30 hours of battery life on four AAs versus six hours for competitors — the Game Boy went on to outsell both rivals combined by roughly eight to one
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 24, 2026
In 1982, Johnson & Johnson pulled 31 million bottles of Tylenol from shelves at a cost of $100 million after seven Chicago-area deaths from cyanide-laced capsules — the company’s decision to recall before regulators required it became the template every business school still teaches for crisis response
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 24, 2026
Being easygoing isn’t always a personality trait — for some adults it’s a strategy learned in households where having an opinion cost too much
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 24, 2026
Finance
Charles Ponzi promised investors a 50 percent return in 45 days on international postal reply coupons in 1920, took in $20 million in eight months from 40,000 Bostonians, and was exposed when a reporter noted there weren’t enough coupons in worldwide circulation to back even one percent of the claims
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 24, 2026
Sales
In the 1920s, a Kansas publisher named E. Haldeman-Julius tested his book titles by changing only the cover words and keeping the contents identical — Schopenhauer’s ‘The Art of Controversy’ barely sold until he renamed it ‘How to Argue Logically,’ sales jumped to tens of thousands, and he proved the headline mattered more than the book
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 23, 2026
Growth
Before Airbnb had a single full-time engineer in 2008, founders Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia sold 1,000 boxes of Obama O’s and Cap’n McCain’s cereal at $40 a box during the Democratic and Republican National Conventions to clear their credit card debt — the cereal money funded the company until Y Combinator accepted them months later
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 23, 2026
All Articles by DigitalHothouse

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 23, 2026
In 2001, a group of 17 software developers met at a ski lodge in Snowbird, Utah for three days and emerged with a 68-word manifesto that rewrote how teams build products — none of them owned the trademark, and the word ‘agile’ was chosen over ‘lightweight’ on the second-to-last day

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 23, 2026
Lego nearly went bankrupt in 2003 with debts of $800 million after expanding into theme parks, video games, and clothing — incoming CEO Jørgen Vig Knudstorp cut 3,500 employees, sold the parks, and ordered designers back to a 6,500-piece core brick library that had been abandoned in the 1990s

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 23, 2026
Procter & Gamble was bankrolling more than a dozen daytime radio dramas by 1939 to sell Oxydol detergent to housewives between scenes — radio reporters coined the term ‘soap opera’ as a sneer at the format, which then went on to dominate American television for the next 60 years

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 22, 2026
People who ask one more question before agreeing to anything tend to share a specific set of habits around regret

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 22, 2026
The story goes that when Estée Lauder couldn’t get department stores to carry her face cream, she ‘accidentally’ spilled a bottle of perfume on the floor of the Galeries Lafayette in Paris — the scent sold out by closing time and became the lever that opened every counter in Europe

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 22, 2026
Sara Blakely cut the feet off a pair of pantyhose in her Atlanta apartment in 1998, drove to North Carolina hosiery mills with $5,000 in savings, and was turned away by every factory before one owner’s daughters convinced him to make the prototype that became Spanx

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 22, 2026
When Rolex founder Hans Wilsdorf tied a waterproof Oyster around swimmer Mercedes Gleitze’s neck for her October 1927 vindication swim, she had to abandon the freezing crossing after ten hours — but the watch was still ticking when they pulled her out, and weeks later Wilsdorf bought the entire front page of the Daily Mail to tell the world

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 22, 2026
Bill Gore left DuPont in 1958 to start his own company in the basement of his Newark, Delaware home, and built W.L. Gore & Associates around a rule that no facility could exceed 200 employees — when a plant hit 201, he split it in two, because he believed anyone past Dunbar’s number stopped feeling responsible to the team

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 22, 2026

