Dawn Porthouse
Deliberate Drift
Deliberate Drift analyzes how companies change structurally over time — not through sudden crises or obvious mistakes, but through slow, deliberate drift. Some episodes follow companies whose options narrowed gradually: decisions that looked rational while constraints accumulated beneath the surface. Others follow companies whose structural position strengthened over time: decisions that looked ordinary or even wrong while advantages quietly compounded. In both cases, the analysis focuses on what was building beneath the surface — and why it was almost impossible to see clearly while it was ha...
Auteur
Dawn Porthouse
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Site du podcast
Dernier épisode
6 juil. 2026
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Épisodes
The Fee Is Not the Business: How Costco Built a $4.8B Revenue Stream That Doesn't Behave Like Retail 06.07.2026 20:24
Costco Wholesale Corporation collects approximately $4.8 billion in annual membership fees. Its merchandise operations — the warehouses, the pallets, the buying power — produce almost no operating profit on their own. The fees are not subsidizing the merchandise. The merchandise is justifying the fees. This episode traces how that inversion accumulated — through decisions that looked, at the time,...
Netflix DVD Era: How a Mail-Order Service Built the Foundation for Streaming 22.06.2026 15:56
The standard Netflix story credits Reed Hastings with seeing streaming coming and building a technology company in the guise of a DVD rental service. That framing is satisfying, and it is largely wrong. The decisions that built Netflix's structural position during the DVD era — the subscription model, the no-late-fee policy, the Cinematch recommendation engine, the distribution center network — we...
Domino's Pizza Inc: The recipe change was not the story. It was the cover. 08.06.2026 19:45
Domino's Pizza didn’t just fix their bad pizza; they built a delivery system that changed the game. We dive into how their decisions over a decade transformed them into the biggest pizza company in the world. From admitting their product was subpar to creating a strong internal technology team, Domino's crafted a unique position that competitors struggle to replicate. We explore the infrastructure...
Fisker Inc.: The Dependency That Was There From the Start 29.05.2026 14:36
Fisker Inc. raised nearly a billion dollars, struck a deal with one of the most credible contract manufacturers in the world, and built a vehicle that people genuinely liked driving. It filed for bankruptcy in June 2024. The conventional explanation is that Fisker ran out of money in a cooling EV market. That explanation is true as far as it goes. It doesn't go far enough. This episode looks at th...
Spirit Airlines: How the Model That Made It Work Became the Condition It Couldn't Survive 20.05.2026 16:45
Spirit Airlines was the most profitable airline in America in 2014. It ceased operations on May 2, 2026. The coverage blamed a war, a fuel spike, and a blocked merger. The structural story starts a decade earlier. In this episode, Dawn Porthouse examines how Spirit's ultra-low-cost model depended on a price gap wide enough that passengers would accept every tradeoff — and how that gap closed, slow...
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