Neal Taparia Profile picture
Dec 13, 2024 15 tweets 5 min read Read on X
11 companies built around a single product:

1. Crocs (2002) Image
Everyone called Crocs "ugly."

Doctors & chefs loved them because they were comfortable & easy to clean.

Now they sell 150 million pairs annually. Sometimes, being "ugly" pays off.
2. LEGO (1932)

Started making wooden toys during the Great Depression.

Switched to plastic bricks in 1949. One simple idea: Every brick must fit with every other brick.

That commitment to compatibility still drives them today. Image
3. Spanx (2000)

Sara Blakely cut the feet off her pantyhose to create seamless underwear.

She wrote her own patent to save $3000.

That resourcefulness turned into a billion-dollar revolution in shapewear.
4. Play-Doh (1956)

Started as a wallpaper cleaner company about to go bankrupt.

Then a teacher used it in her classroom as modeling clay.

That pivot to children's toys saved the company and created a cultural icon.
5. Tupperware (1946)

Earl Tupper created airtight containers from plastic waste.

But they didn't sell in stores - until a woman named Brownie Wise suggested home parties.

That sales innovation created the modern direct-selling industry.
6. WD-40 (1953)

The name tells the story: It took 40 attempts to get the formula right.

Scientists created it to prevent Atlas rockets from rusting.

Now most people use it to stop squeaky hinges.

Over 70 years later, they still use the exact same formula.
7. Sriracha (1980)

David Tran fled Vietnam with nothing but a hot sauce recipe.

He never advertised. Never changed the recipe. Never raised prices.

The sauce grew purely through word of mouth into a global phenomenon.
8. Red Bull (1987)

Found a Thai energy drink used by truckers to stay awake.

Modified it for Western tastes.

Spent 20 years perfecting ONE drink while others launched dozens of flavors. Image
9. Duracell (1924)

Started making mercury batteries for military equipment.

For 100 years, they've had one mission: Make batteries that last longer.

That singular focus made them a household name. Image
10. Carmex (1937)

Alfred Woelbing made the first batch in his kitchen to treat cold sores.

The recipe was so perfect, they never changed it.

87 years later, it's still made exactly the same way.
11. White Claw (2016)

Saw an opportunity: Health-conscious drinkers wanted something lighter than beer.

Created hard seltzer when no one knew what it was.

Now every major beverage company is trying to copy them.
Success isn't about doing everything.

It's about doing ONE thing better than anyone else.

You don't need a list of products or a suite of services to be successful.

You can do more with less.
A bit about me:

I built 2 multimillion-dollar businesses without investment, selling my first for $60M after starting it in high school.

Now, I'm building a multi-million dollar gaming startup—and writing on X about how to do more with less.
Thanks for reading! If you enjoyed this:

1. Follow me @nealtaparia to learn how to be a work-less, do-more entrepreneur
2. Repost this thread if you found it helpful

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More from @nealtaparia

Feb 3
In 1984, a tiny Irish airline declared WAR on Europe's giants.

But they did it by breaking all the rules.

40 years later they're called "The World's Most Hated Airline."

Here's how Ryanair became Europe's largest (and most profitable) airline: Image
Picture this:

One 15-seat Embraer Bandeirante turboprop.
82,000 passengers in their first year.
A mission to break the Aer Lingus/British Airways duopoly.

No one thought they stood a chance.

But here's where it gets interesting...
By 1990, Ryanair was bleeding money.

£20 million in losses.
Intense competition crushing margins.
On the verge of bankruptcy.

Then came the man who would change everything:
Read 16 tweets
Jan 20
How do you save a dying company?

In 1998, LEGO reported a deficit for the first time since 1945.

Six years later a new CEO turned it around.

Profits increased 240%... By selling less...

Here's how he pulled off the impossible: Image
The story starts in 1998.

After 53 years of business, LEGO posted its first deficit year.

The company had expanded too quickly into peripheral businesses, and innovation wasn't driving profits.

But what happened next would reshape the entire toy industry... Image
LEGO tried to save itself through licensing partnerships.

They partnered with major entertainment companies, including:
• Disney
• Lucasfilm
• Warner Brothers

While it helped stabilize finances temporarily, deeper problems remained.

Here's why:
Read 15 tweets
Jan 17
Top 10 US Presidents.

Based on average annual GDP growth during their time in office:

1. Franklin D. Roosevelt - 10.1% growth Image
Context is crucial:

FDR inherited an economy that was crushed by the Great Depression.

In 1932, the year he was first elected, growth was -12.9% ...

Here's how he transformed it:
FDR's New Deal wasn't just spending—it was strategic revolution:

• Created jobs through infrastructure
• Reduced income inequality
• Built social safety nets

Then WWII spending accelerated everything.

But what about presidents who started with stable economies?
Read 16 tweets
Jan 15
Toyota was the biggest tech turnaround of 1950.

Ford made 100x more cars per day.
GM was outproducing them by 350x.
The whole auto industry thought they were a joke.

But now everyone copies Toyota.

Here's how they revolutionized manufacturing: Image
Post-WWII Japan was devastated.

Toyota faced a brutal reality: They had to close factories and lay off workers due to financial constraints.

But then came a lifeline: The U.S. Army ordered 1,000 trucks during the Korean War.

Here's where a new order created new ideas:
In 1950, Eiji Toyoda visited Ford's factories in America.

He studied dozens of U.S. manufacturers, observing their operations.

The American way was to solve problems with massive resources.

But Toyota couldn't afford that luxury.

And that limitation sparked genius:
Read 15 tweets
Jan 13
This $3 billion company breaks every hiring rule:

• They read resumes differently
• Focus on unique qualifications
• Look beyond traditional experience

Yet they have insane employee retention.

Here's Patagonia's counterintuitive approach: Image
The pressure to scale is intense for startups.

Investors want rapid growth. Markets demand quick expansion.

Most companies cave and start hiring frantically to keep up.

But Patagonia took a different path that left everyone stunned:
They receive over 9,000 applications for every open position.

Yet they deliberately take their time with each hire.

They don't just look at resumes and experience.

But their approach goes much deeper than most realize:
Read 20 tweets
Jan 10
11 of the Most Successful Family Businesses Ever:

1. Walmart (1962) - The Walton Family Image
Sam Walton started with a single store in Rogers, Arkansas.

His secret was a radically different approach to retail:

Build stores in small towns others ignored. Keep prices lower than competitors could match.

Walton's real innovation wasn't just low prices...
He created a supply chain revolution:

• Built distribution centers near stores
• Computerized inventory before others
• Shared sales data with suppliers

Today, Walmart's annual revenue exceeds $600 billion.

The Walton family still owns 47%.
Read 26 tweets

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