Badmaash Company Index
Compare two companies side-by-side on:
| Element | Style | |--------|-------| | Color scheme | Black + neon green, graffiti accents | | Score visualization | Spray paint meter, flame icons | | Typography | Stencil or distressed fonts | | Interactions | Glitch effects on high scores | | Sound (optional) | Airhorn for top 10 entries | badmaash company index
The data is anecdotal but compelling. Looking back at the FAANG stocks (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, Google) in their infancy, all would have scored above an 8.5 on the BCI. Compare two companies side-by-side on: | Element |
However, there is a "Halo Effect" decay. 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. The data is anecdotal but compelling
| Company | BCI Score (Startup Phase) | BCI Score (Post-IPO) | Result | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Netflix | 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 |
The Sweet Spot: A mature company should aim for an index score of 6.0 to 7.5. Anything lower, and you are a dinosaur waiting for extinction. Anything higher (9+), and you are likely committing securities fraud or burning investor cash on golden toilets.
A standard company buys from authorized distributors. A badmaash company goes to the source, clandestinely.