What if a product that seemingly failed on every metric ends up becoming the blueprint for the future?
Take Apple Lisa—launched in 1983. By conventional measures, it was a disaster. The price tag was brutal. Performance was sluggish. Sales numbers barely moved the needle. Internally, the project created enough tension to eventually force a leadership shake-up.
Yet here's the thing: Lisa didn't disappear into the dustbin of history. The graphical user interface concepts, the design philosophy, the vision it represented—those threads got woven into what came next. The early "failure" became the foundation for something far bigger.
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BearMarketBarber
· 19h ago
Failing products instead pave the way for success. This logic sounds great, but in reality... How much did Lisa spend to eventually get the Macintosh?
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BearMarketBro
· 19h ago
That thing with Lisa, to put it simply, was a noble failure by Jobs, but it truly changed the world... Money isn't the issue, vision is.
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GateUser-e87b21ee
· 19h ago
Looking at Lisa's example, it's truly brilliant. She died completely back then, but ended up paving the way for later Macs... Isn't this the kind of "failure is actually trial and error" pattern?
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ForkTongue
· 19h ago
Lisa's story is just an underestimated pioneer, really.
Losers are criminals, winners are kings, but Apple stubbornly turned failure into legend.
What if a product that seemingly failed on every metric ends up becoming the blueprint for the future?
Take Apple Lisa—launched in 1983. By conventional measures, it was a disaster. The price tag was brutal. Performance was sluggish. Sales numbers barely moved the needle. Internally, the project created enough tension to eventually force a leadership shake-up.
Yet here's the thing: Lisa didn't disappear into the dustbin of history. The graphical user interface concepts, the design philosophy, the vision it represented—those threads got woven into what came next. The early "failure" became the foundation for something far bigger.