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Reluctant Lessons - Boeing’s Descent: Culture, Crashes, and Consequences
Published 22 hours ago
Description
Boeing was once one of the most trusted names in aviation. Pilots respected it. Airlines depended on it. Passengers felt safe flying on it. The company’s reputation was so strong that a popular saying captured that confidence perfectly: “If it ain’t Boeing, I ain’t going.”
But over time, Boeing’s culture began to change. After its 1997 merger with McDonnell Douglas, many believe the company shifted from an engineering-first mindset to one increasingly focused on financial performance, stock price, cost control, and shareholder value. The consequences would be devastating.
In this episode of Reluctant Lessons, we examine how one of America’s most respected industrial companies became a cautionary tale about culture, trust, safety, and leadership. We’ll look at the 737 MAX disasters, Boeing’s stock decline, high-profile quality failures, certification delays, and the deeper business lesson behind it all: when a company forgets what made it great, the damage can be far greater than anyone imagined.
But over time, Boeing’s culture began to change. After its 1997 merger with McDonnell Douglas, many believe the company shifted from an engineering-first mindset to one increasingly focused on financial performance, stock price, cost control, and shareholder value. The consequences would be devastating.
In this episode of Reluctant Lessons, we examine how one of America’s most respected industrial companies became a cautionary tale about culture, trust, safety, and leadership. We’ll look at the 737 MAX disasters, Boeing’s stock decline, high-profile quality failures, certification delays, and the deeper business lesson behind it all: when a company forgets what made it great, the damage can be far greater than anyone imagined.