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Ben Nadel at Scotch On The Rock (SOTR) 2010 (London) with: John Whish and Kev McCabe
Ben Nadel at Scotch On The Rock (SOTR) 2010 (London) with: John Whish Kev McCabe

Badmaash | Company Index |best|

| Company | BCI Score (Startup Phase) | BCI Score (Post-IPO) | Result | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 9.5 (Killed Blockbuster) | 4.0 (Established streamer) | Stable, boring profit | | Tesla | 9.9 (Unveiled Cybertruck) | 7.5 (Public automaker) | Volatile, but high growth | | WeWork | 9.8 (Renting rooms for parties) | 0 (Post-Adam Neumann) | Bankruptcy |

This article deconstructs the Badmaash Company Index, explaining its core pillars, its correlation with stock performance, and how to calculate whether your startup has the right amount of "controlled chaos." The Badmaash Company Index (BCI) is a qualitative and quantitative scoring system designed to measure a company’s capacity for strategic disobedience . It is not a measure of fraud or malice, but of audacity. badmaash company index

Enter the . While you won’t find this ticker on Bloomberg or Reuters (yet), the concept is gaining traction among venture capitalists and organizational psychologists as a proprietary metric to identify companies that break the rules without breaking the law. | Company | BCI Score (Startup Phase) |

Chaos must serve the customer. If your rebellion adds friction for the end user, you aren't badmaash; you are just incompetent. Conclusion: Why You Need the Badmaash Company Index In a recessionary, regulation-heavy global economy, most CEOs are trying to lower their risk profile. That is a mistake. By trying to score a zero on the Badmaash Index, you cede the market to smaller, hungrier players who are willing to break the china. While you won’t find this ticker on Bloomberg

By: Industry Analyst Desk

The is not about being evil; it is about being unreasonable in the pursuit of value. The next time your board tells you to "follow best practices," ask them what their Badmaash score is. If they don't know the answer, maybe it's time to start a rebellion.

However, there is a . Once a company goes public, the BCI tends to plummet. Why? Public markets hate uncertainty. The same rebelliousness that created the company becomes a liability.

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Ben Nadel
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