Difference between revisions of "Pig in a poke"

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(Counter Plays)
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==Counter Plays==
 
==Counter Plays==
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The counter play would be for either a potential buyer, who might be misled about the value or perhaps by third-party industry observers who might draw the wrong conclusion from the transaction.
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In both cases, the cure would be situational awareness (so you can recognize a dead-end technology) and due diligence (so that you can understand the core elements of the business being sold).
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==

Revision as of 17:55, 1 March 2024

Also known as “putting lipstick on a pig”, this is the process of creating a situation where others believe the toxic asset has long term value and disposing of it through sale before the toxicity reveals itself.

From chapter 11 in the book:


A mechanism of dressing up a liability as some form of future business before divesting to a third party.[1]



Key Elements

Context

Examples

Counter Plays

The counter play would be for either a potential buyer, who might be misled about the value or perhaps by third-party industry observers who might draw the wrong conclusion from the transaction.

In both cases, the cure would be situational awareness (so you can recognize a dead-end technology) and due diligence (so that you can understand the core elements of the business being sold).

See Also

Gameplay Patterns

References