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  1. You can found an institution or you can inherit it. The East Coast of the United States is about inheritance. [0] That means inherited wealth, like the Du Ponts, Forbes, and Mellon families.It means inherited names, like Kennedy, Bush, and Clinton.But most of all it means inherited institutions, like the media corporations of New York and the government bodies of Washington, DC.
  2. andrewschrbr.medium.com

    Because the latter inherited organizations exist in a read-only state. Meaning they work fine, until a change of operational landscape demands adaptation and the existing systems break. Inherited organizations select leaders through heirs — genetic or political — while founder organizations select leaders through industriousness-from-scratch.
  3. the-gate-keeper.medium.com

    It is by mere coincidence that my own fate has fallen at the intersection between East Coast inherited institutions and West Coast Founder Disruptors that Balaji highlights in his post: Founding vs
  4. virginica.substack.com

    Last week, Balaji Srinivasan wrote an interesting blog post comparing institutions where those at the top are founders to institutions where power is distributed via inheritance. He finds that institutions run by founders have numerous advantages, but most relevant to our time is their ability to reinvent themselves in the face of a disaster or societal shift like the COVID-19 pandemic.
  5. Founding vs Inheritance in Real life . The idea is that some people and organizations act like founders, who create something new and valuable out of nothing, while others act like inheritors, who rely on the legacy and status quo of what they have received from the past. Founders are innovators, risk-takers, and problem-solvers.
  6. Founding vs Inheriting, Balaji S. Srinivasan Posted: 5/7/2021 . Editors note: This is a review of Balaji's post written partially for a shot at $100. I'm always looking for new and creative ways to sell out. This is a deep and important dichotomy that takes many names and often goes unnoticed. Those who cannot do, teach.

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