Very simplistic view. When VCs put in that much cash, they also pressure management to spend it as fast as they can and expand and conquer new markets. That's the bet. That's the game.
Fab did that and it turned out the market was not there to float the investment. It happens, sometimes the firm beats the odds and people celebrate the management and their free spending ways as the reason for impressive growth. The ignore all the mistakes because the end result is all that matters.
Sometimes the bet doesn't pay off and here we are. Blaming the management and all the mistakes they made as the reason they ended up in this situation. The reality is the VCs, the management, and the employees know the truth. It is a game, it is a bet. If it folds, they move on.
Not sure why people get so worked up, lash out against management and go on and on about calling them "evil". It is a cop out. A lot of those same people were calling that same management "geniuses" for the rapid growth a couple of years ago.
Just a reminder: the employees know it is a startup and they know the risk. That is why they picked Fab because of the potential upside vs. working at a place like IBM.
Fab did that and it turned out the market was not there to float the investment. It happens, sometimes the firm beats the odds and people celebrate the management and their free spending ways as the reason for impressive growth. The ignore all the mistakes because the end result is all that matters.
Sometimes the bet doesn't pay off and here we are. Blaming the management and all the mistakes they made as the reason they ended up in this situation. The reality is the VCs, the management, and the employees know the truth. It is a game, it is a bet. If it folds, they move on.
Not sure why people get so worked up, lash out against management and go on and on about calling them "evil". It is a cop out. A lot of those same people were calling that same management "geniuses" for the rapid growth a couple of years ago.