The Business Model by Inc.
Before Zoom meetings, FaceTime calls, and Microsoft Teams, there was Skype. In the early 2000s, Skype revolutionized the way people communicated, making it possible to call anyone in the world over the internet for little to no cost. The company grew at a staggering pace, attracted hundreds of millions of users, became a household name, and helped turn video calling from a novelty into a necessity. So how did the company that pioneered internet communication lose its place in the future it helped create? Welcome to Fail Factory—where we look at the companies that stumbled, faded, or failed, and fix them up with the benefit of hindsight. In this episode, Inc. staff reporters Ali Donaldson and Ben Sherry explore Skype's rise from startup disrupter to global tech powerhouse, the billion-dollar acquisitions that reshaped its trajectory, and the strategic decisions that left it vulnerable as competitors like Zoom, WhatsApp, Slack, and Microsoft Teams transformed the communications landscape. Along the way, we'll examine the founders' lessons hidden inside Skype's story: why being first isn't always enough, how success can make companies complacent, and what happens when market leaders stop evolving while customer expectations continue to change.
63 episodes
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