专栏破产

There’s no sense in clinging to a golden age

At the weekend I spent a few melancholy hours wandering around a venue I have owned for over a decade. In its heyday it was a boisterous place. But it has been sold and the buyer takes possession next week.

I don’t regret the disposal, but it is still sad to say farewell to an enterprise one has nurtured for so long, now shut and unloved. For as Washington Irving said, “nothing impresses the mind with a deeper feeling of loneliness than to tread the silent and deserted scene of former flow and pageant”.

But too much nostalgia in business is deadly. The relentless march of progress can never be halted, no matter how much one pines for past glories. Look at dinosaurs such as Kodak, the world leader in photography for over a century. Its very purpose was the capture of memories. But the death of silver halide film, killed by the unstoppable rise of digital imaging, appears to have done for the US corporate giant. Kodak tried hard to reinvent itself, first in digital cameras and then printers. But it could never replace the margins and cash flow that it enjoyed from the legacy analogue business. Now it is engaged in a desperate scramble to liquidate its patent portfolio and stave off bankruptcy.

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卢克•约翰逊

卢克•约翰逊(Luke Johnson)是一位成果颇丰的企业家和创业家,他为英国《金融时报》撰写企业家专栏。他目前担任英国皇家艺术协会的主席,并管理着一家私人股本投资公司——Risk Capital Partners。约翰逊曾在牛津大学学医,但是毕业后却进入投行业。他在1992年收购PizzaExpress,担任其董事长,并将其上市。到1999年出售的时候,PizzaExpress的股价已经从40英镑涨至800英镑。

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