Business
Reed Hastings built Netflix’s founding myth around a $40 Blockbuster late fee for Apollo 13, then three years later flew to Dallas to offer Blockbuster his DVD-by-mail service for $50 million and was laughed out of the conference room
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 19, 2026
Harley-Davidson filed to trademark the specific sound of its V-twin engine in 1994 — the potato-potato-potato rumble — and spent six years and millions in legal fees defending the application before withdrawing it in 2000 when Japanese rivals proved they could replicate the cadence
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 19, 2026
The quiet reason some high performers underplay their wins has less to do with humility than with a long-running habit of managing other people’s reactions to their success
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 19, 2026
In 1995, eBay founder Pierre Omidyar’s first sale was a broken laser pointer that went for $14.83 — when he emailed the buyer asking if he understood the item was broken, the buyer replied that he collected broken laser pointers, and Omidyar realized any object had a market if the buyers could find each other
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 19, 2026
Finance
In October 1907, J.P. Morgan locked New York’s top bankers inside his Madison Avenue library and refused to unlock the door until they pledged $25 million to stop a run on the Trust Company of America — the all-night meeting ended at 4:45 a.m. and led directly to the creation of the Federal Reserve six years later
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 18, 2026
Growth
When WD-40 launched in 1953, the formula was the 40th attempt to create a water displacement spray for the Atlas missile program — the chemists never patented it because filing would have required disclosing the recipe, and the unpatented formula has remained a trade secret for 73 years
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 18, 2026
Management
Sam Walton flew his own single-engine Cessna across rural Arkansas in the 1960s to scout store locations from 500 feet, counting cars in competitors’ parking lots with a notepad on his knee — the practice continued until Walmart had 276 stores and he could no longer fly to all of them
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 18, 2026
Technology
Before Google indexed the web, Larry Page and Sergey Brin tried to sell their PageRank algorithm to Excite in 1999 for $1 million, then dropped the price to $750,000 — Excite CEO George Bell turned them down because the search results were too good and users would leave the site too quickly
Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 18, 2026
All Articles by Qasim Shehzad

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 18, 2026
In 1975, Pet Rock creator Gary Dahl packaged ordinary Rosarito Beach stones in a cardboard carrier with a 32-page training manual and sold 1.5 million units at $3.95 each in six months — the joke product made him a millionaire before Christmas and was forgotten by Easter

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 18, 2026
7 quiet habits of people who can disagree in a meeting without making anyone feel attacked

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 18, 2026
People who go quiet in group conversations aren’t always shy — some are tracking too many social cues at once to find a clean entry point

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 17, 2026
When Tupperware’s airtight containers sat unsold on hardware store shelves, a single mother named Brownie Wise moved them into living rooms and turned housewives into the sales force that made the brand famous

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 17, 2026
8 quiet signs someone has emotionally outgrown a friendship long before they’ve said anything about it

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 16, 2026
Henry Ford raised factory wages to $5 a day in January 1914 — more than double the going rate — and the line outside the Highland Park plant grew so large that Detroit police used fire hoses in 12-degree weather to disperse 10,000 job seekers

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 16, 2026
When James Dyson finished prototype 5,127 of his bagless vacuum in 1983, he had spent five years and was more than $1 million in debt — every major manufacturer rejected the design because the replacement-bag market was worth hundreds of millions a year

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 16, 2026
When BlackBerry controlled nearly half of the US smartphone market, its leaders saw the iPhone’s flaws clearly — and still missed the shift that would erase its lead

Tweak Your Biz Editorial Team June 16, 2026

