Volume 199: Narrative As Firmware.
Narrative As Firmware.
tl;dr: Disruptive narratives emerge during downturns.
The most innovative and disruptive corporate narratives emerge during periods of economic contraction and then scale during periods of economic expansion. Here’s why.
First, as we shift from economic expansion to economic contraction, the defining logic that shapes our understanding of categories breaks down and fragments: Uncertainty increases, future predictability decreases, and competition for “making sense of things” rises.
Second, this breakdown of category-level logic creates powerful countercyclical opportunity. Orthodox competitors retreat and regroup, and as the market questions their underlying logic, innovative new narratives emerge, especially those that presage a better future at a time when nobody feels good about, well, anything.
Third, as economic conditions stabilize, the new narrative has already spread cohesion throughout the corporations' decision-making systems, product and service offerings, capital allocation, and more. Meanwhile, competition is still stuck in the old paradigm.
Finally, as economic conditions return to expansion, the now mature internal narrative manifests via a high degree of competitive differentiation, accelerating growth.
Ultimately, as category understanding converges and hardens again, it often does so around these previously disruptive yet now mature narratives that emerged during contraction.
Let’s consider two opposing corporate reactions to an economic downturn with this in mind:
The first group, likely embedded deeply into a category's current orthodoxy, operates reactively: They pull back, optimize, and retreat into what worked before. Their driving logic is internal and backward-looking: focused on cost, efficiency, and survival.
The second group operates proactively. They don’t just try to survive a contraction. Instead, they use it to rewrite the underlying logic of the category, not at a surface level but through a new narrative understanding of what is possible: a redefinition of who they serve, what they are doing, and the future they are building. Their driving logic is external and forward-looking: focused on value, differentiation, and growth.
And often, it works. Not by accident, but because a superior narrative acts as a force multiplier when installed as new organizational firmware.
The contrast I’d like to make is that most corporations treat narratives, if they have one at all, as software: easy to deploy, easy to tweak, updated often. They put out content marketing here, campaigns there, some boilerplate on a pitch deck, the ‘About Us’ section on a website, an elevator pitch, and maybe a shiny new rebrand. If it doesn’t work, they patch and move on, building up narrative debt over time.
Superior narratives don’t work that way. They act like firmware:
Deeply embedded into the architecture of the corporation’s business systems
Durable across cycles and management changes
Invisible but determinative, governing how all other layers function
Difficult to change, except during moments of existential clarity—such as crisis, reinvention, or generational transition
Critically, those who install a superior narrative and treat it as firmware don’t just change how they talk or message; they change the very logic upon which their business operates.
This isn’t just a Silicon Valley trick. It’s a global phenomenon—more visible, in fact, in companies that have chosen to leapfrog incumbency from a position of structural disadvantage. An observation, the late, great Clayton Christensen in his seminal book “The Innovator’s Dilemma” famously labeled ‘disruption.’
For example, while we cannot know the full dimensions of the internal narratives that shaped their decision-making, we can infer based on publicly available information:
Spotify (Sweden): Forged amid the financial crisis, within the wreckage of a collapsing music industry, Spotify didn’t build a product—it offered a new worldview: Music is about access, not ownership. This narrative shaped its licensing logic, pricing model, approach to UX, and cultural role. This wasn’t just about a playlist. It was a new economic contract.
ARM Holdings (UK): As the first dot-com bubble burst, Intel dominated with centralized computing muscle. ARM, by contrast, installed a new and opposing narrative as firmware: Computing should be small, efficient, and everywhere. This wasn’t just a roadmap, it was a philosophy. As a result, ARM-designed chips powered the mobile revolution and now sit at the center of AI, IoT, and embedded systems. ARM didn’t scale a product. It licensed a logic.
Salesforce (USA): Emerging in the aftermath of the dot-com crash, Salesforce embedded new firmware: Software should serve customers, not IT departments. “No software” wasn’t just a tagline—it was a belief system that reshaped the economics of enterprise tech. A new logic that drove Salesforce's cloud-first model, subscription pricing, customer success focus, and app ecosystem. This wasn’t just a new way to do CRM—it was a new management paradigm built around relationships, rather than installations.
When mapping the timeline of the emergence of such narratives, we can sum it up as installed in crisis, scaled during expansion:
The new narrative firmware is written in contraction: As the dominant category logic fragments amid times of economic stress, it creates the space for a new narrative firmware to be installed and accepted.
The firmware matures through recovery: As the economy stabilizes, the narrative spreads cohesion across the corporation's systems via products, experience, sales, hiring, capital allocation, and marketing built from the same operating logic.
The firmware is scaled during expansion: With expanding resources and clear internal alignment, the unique logic of the corporation’s narrative drives differentiated growth and becomes self-reinforcing as the broader economy expands.
This is not incidental. Downturns permit leaders to question everything. Without the blocking effect of converged logic, corporations that replace outmoded operating assumptions—not just immediate-term tactics—build toward enduring advantage.
To answer the question of business performance, I did a ‘back of a cigarette packet’ analysis comparing a basket of corporations that installed superior narratives during past contractions against their more orthodox peers. The result was dramatic outperformance relative to those who maintained the pre-existing orthodoxy. Over a ten-year horizon, the narrative-driven group showed growth multiples exceeding 15x, while peers who retained orthodox logic averaged under 2x. (Be aware that while the pattern feels right to me, these specific numbers could also be wrong. I’m no financial analyst.)
Of course, with blinding 20:20 hindsight, we can also observe that not every disruptive narrative survives contact with the market, which means survivor bias likely impacts the return numbers somewhat.
However, I’d argue that the potential returns are significant. It drives alignment, innovation, capital allocation, and disruptive market leadership.
Is there a lesson here? Sure. Measure twice, cut once to ensure it's built from real needs, is believable, deliverable, and likely to be embraced by the market. There are some common factors among the examples I gave above, so if I were to suggest some criteria for a superior narrative, they would be:
It is externally oriented. It’s about who the customer becomes, not what the company does.
It functions as belief-driven business logic. It uses carefully considered counter-orthodox beliefs to govern choices across product, strategy, people, and capital, not just storytelling.
It meaningfully differentiates. It justifies unique systems, activities, and experiences that competitors can’t easily copy.
It creates strategic coherence. Teams align without being controlled, as the narrative guides distributed teams in a singular direction.
It is future-permissioning. It authorizes moves others can’t make, because they do not yet have the benefit of reverse engineering the logic and counter-orthodox beliefs encapsulated by your unique narrative.
When successful, it becomes the corporation’s greatest asset. Not because it helps tell better stories, but because it inspires the entire company with what it can be and, crucially, how it must act.