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Stagnation Assassin: The Anti-Consultant Manifesto

Stagnation Assassin is Todd Hagopian’s hard-charging argument that most struggling organizations aren’t really being beaten by competitors, market conditions, or bad luck, but by their own tolerance for drift. Hagopian turns his personal history, including the disciplined channeling of neurodivergent intensity, into the HOT System, a set of frameworks meant to help leaders diagnose stagnation, concentrate resources, move faster, and challenge the “best practices” that often make companies look busy while they quietly decay. The book moves from the Stagnation Genome and the 90-Day Question to tools like the Karelin Method, the 80/20 Matrix, customer and competitor intelligence, orthodoxy-smashing, and a final 90-day transformation playbook.

Hagopian writes like someone who has stood inside a burning building and has very little patience for committees debating the temperature. The Whirlpool refrigeration story gives the book its emotional spine: the division losing $175 million while dashboards still glowed green, the maddening phrase “that’s how we’ve always done it,” the seventeen signatures required for routine engineering changes, the reluctance to launch a lower-priced counter-depth refrigerator because it might disturb a premium fantasy. Those moments land because they feel painfully recognizable. I appreciated how the book keeps returning to the difference between motion and progress, because that’s a distinction many business books nod toward but rarely make this blunt or memorable. The writing has a martial rhythm, sometimes thrilling, sometimes a little relentless, but it suits the subject. The book wants to shake the reader by the collar, and often, I thought it earned that urgency.

The anti-consultant posture is bracing, especially when Hagopian argues that consensus, benchmarking, and endless analysis can become elegant disguises for fear. His insistence on concentrating resources around the tiny slice of work that actually creates value feels practical, almost cleansing. The best parts of the book make room for tension by grounding intensity in systems rather than personality. I liked that Hagopian doesn’t pretend he invented Pareto analysis, Theory of Constraints, or continuous improvement. His claim is more interesting than invention: that the power lies in compression, integration, and disciplined deployment. That humility, when it appears, gives the louder passages more credibility.

Stagnation Assassin is best for executives, operators, founders, private equity leaders, and ambitious managers who suspect their organization is confusing survival with health and who are ready for a confrontational, practical framework rather than a soothing one. I’d recommend it to readers who can handle its intensity, sift its sharper claims with judgment, and still let its urgency do what urgency is supposed to do: wake something up.

Pages: 250 | ASIN: B0GV1KXJFN

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