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The Fall of Enron: When Smart People Built a Stupid Lie

The Fall of Enron: When Smart People Built a Stupid Lie

Published 20 hours ago
Description
Enron wasn’t just another failed company. It became a symbol.

Once celebrated as one of America’s most innovative businesses, Enron had the Wall Street praise, the soaring stock price, the brilliant executives, and the confidence of investors, employees, analysts, and the media. It was supposed to represent the future of business.

Then the story collapsed.

Behind the image of innovation was a company built on hidden debt, aggressive accounting, conflicted partnerships, market manipulation, and a culture that rewarded arrogance over accountability. When the truth finally came out, Enron was bankrupt, employees lost jobs and retirement savings, shareholders lost billions, and one of the world’s most respected accounting firms was destroyed.

But Enron’s damage didn’t stop with investors. Its manipulation of energy markets helped hurt ordinary people too, including Californians who lived through rolling blackouts, skyrocketing prices, and uncertainty over something as basic as keeping the lights on.

In this episode of Reluctant Lessons, we look at how smart people built a stupid lie, why so many people wanted to believe it, and what entrepreneurs, executives, and business leaders can learn from one of the most infamous corporate failures in history.

Because Enron didn’t fail from a lack of intelligence. 

It failed from a lack of truth.
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