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Startups & Sandwiches: A Virtual Visit with Best-Selling Author and Leading Entrepreneur Eric Ries

Ries joined the Leeds community virtually to discuss entrepreneurship, values, and his forthcoming book on building enduring companies that help human society flourish.听

Eric Ries virtual visit for Startups & Sandwiches hosted by the Deming Center

The Deming Center for Entrepreneurship concluded its Startups & Sandwiches series for the spring 2026 semester on a high note with a virtual visit from , author of The Lean Startup,听The Startup Way, and The Leader鈥檚 Guide. Students filled Koelbel 218 to hear Ries鈥 insights on business and to learn about his forthcoming book, : Why Good Companies Go Bad ... and How Great Companies Stay Great.

Ries shared his journey from earning a degree in computer science to being 鈥渟wept up in the dot-com bubble,鈥 which he amusingly described as fun at first, but then humiliating. Over the course of his career, he has studied management and worked on innovation across big companies, governments and NGOs鈥攍earning along the way how to master key business skills like accounting and governance.

A thought-provoking conversation covered a range of topics. Here are some of Ries鈥 insights.

On the reason for his new book.
鈥淢ost of the ways that I was taught about how companies should be run and structured ultimately leads to them being corrupted.鈥 The reality, he said, is that there are many ways to make money without creating any value at all. 鈥淚t turns out that there鈥檚 actually good evidence that we know how to build organizations that stay true to human flourishing over the long-term.鈥 It鈥檚 time to define new best practices鈥攔eplacing the old ones that don鈥檛 work鈥斺渢hat will leave the world better than we found it.鈥

The Defining Questions for Modern Business

In the Deming Center newsletter, "The Entrepreneurship Pulse," Executive Director Erick Mueller highlighted the central questions Eric Ries posed for tomorrow鈥檚 business and thought leaders鈥攓uestions that push us to rethink the purpose of business and how it creates value.

  • How do we build companies that are additive rather than extractive?
  • How do we align AI creators with human thriving over "profit at all costs?"
  • How do we dismantle shareholder primacy in favor of organizational purpose?

On the realities of entrepreneurship.
Ries drew laughs when he noted that entrepreneurship in the movies is often about a 鈥減lucky protagonist with a great idea.鈥 As an example, he cited Ghost Busters, one of his favorite films. In real life, it鈥檚 very different. The hardest work is the foundational decisions, like what features to include in a product and defining customers. But in the movies, 鈥渢hat stuff is so boring it鈥檚 limited to a two-minute montage.鈥

Seeing thousands of startup stories throughout his career, Ries understands the dark side of entrepreneurship. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not all puppies and rainbows. There鈥檚 also a lot of misery in the startup world,鈥 much of it driven by the misguided best practices we鈥檝e been indoctrinated into that cause us to deviate from what we know to be right, he believes.

That tension often leads to decisions that are misaligned with personal values. 鈥淚t鈥檚 time for this to end鈥攚e have to reconcile the formal definitions of what business is with our intuitive understanding of what business is for.鈥

On founding the Long-Term Stock Exchange (LTSE).听
鈥淭he nice thing about doing something so impossibly difficult is that nobody expects you to succeed.鈥澨

On the soul of a company.听
鈥淚t takes me in the book 11 chapters to give the concept of a corporate soul.鈥 Organizations, he explained, function like super organisms. He pointed to a study in which the researchers measured the ethical character of different organizations and used the assessments to accurately predict the organizations鈥 behavior in future situations. 鈥淚f you are a cog in that machine, what you do is not entirely in your own control, and often you end up creating effects that are contrary to your own values. And if that sounds scary to you because you鈥檙e thinking of starting an organization, then good, it should scare you.鈥

On mission-driven organizations.
While avoiding traditional buzzwords, Ries emphasized that true mission-driven organizations stand apart. 鈥淚t turns out we have great evidence that people love working at companies like that, buying from companies like that and love investing in companies like that.鈥 Their advantage, he said, comes from the most underrated aspect in business鈥攖rustworthiness.

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鈥漌e have to reconcile the formal definitions of what business is with our intuitive understanding of what business is for.鈥

Eric Ries, author and entrepreneur

On optimism and what鈥檚 next for business.
Though clear-eyed about current challenges, Ries manages to stay hopeful. 鈥淚 think the era of shareholder primacy is actually already over 鈥 it鈥檚 an idea that has basically caused its own intellectual collapse.鈥 Change, he believes, will come through generational turnover and a compelling alternative vision. 鈥淚f you've ever been navigating somewhere and you make a wrong turn, it鈥檚 not like you say, 鈥楤low up the car, we鈥檒l never get there; we鈥檙e all doomed.鈥 As long as people wake up out of 鈥 unconscious behavior, then I think we鈥檒l be able to get people to recognize the need for this change and turn the car around.鈥

On aligning your decisions with your values.听
鈥淚f you want to make change, the first step is to make sure that the actual decisions you make鈥攏o matter how immaterial they may seem鈥攁re in fact aligned with your values. That鈥檚 your surprising power in your life and career.鈥