Three Business Lessons from 'Moneyball' Here are the top takeaways from the story of how the Oakland A's changed the way baseball teams do business.

By Jason Fell

MoneyballWhen business as usual isn't cutting it, you might consider turning your company's strategy on its head. Or, perhaps, find someone else who can help you do it.

That's the premise of Moneyball, a film based on the 2003 Michael Lewis book Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game about the Oakland Athletics baseball team. After several seasons of painful losses, the team's general manager, Billy Beane, adopted a radical, statistics-driven approach to building a competitive baseball team under an ownership that underinvested in the franchise.

The film made its U.S. premiere this weekend.

As Major League Baseball nears the end of its regular season and starts looking to the playoffs, here are three lessons small-business owners can learn from the true story behind the film:

1. Make change when it's needed.
After a painful loss in the 2001 playoffs and then losing three top players to larger-market teams which were ponying up millions of dollars to acquire the best players, Beane -- played in the film by Brad Pitt -- decides that drastic changes need to be made. He turns to a young Yale economics graduate who believed players should be valued by their on-base percentage (how often a batter reaches base) rather than the traditional method of relying on scouts' experience and intuition.

Not only did this new way of doing business enable the A's to acquire run-producing players, it allowed them to do so at a lower cost because those players were largely undervalued by other ball clubs. "We are card counters at the blackjack table and we're going to turn the tables on the casino," Beane says in the film.

2. Stand by your decisions.
Beane's unconventional methodology was ridiculed by baseball critics. It also wasn't greeted warmly within the A's organization, with player manager Art Howe and several coaches among his early detractors. But Beane didn't budge. He fired at least one top scout who refused to adopt the team's new recruiting plan.

Beane also worked to get the rest of the team and staff on board. He explained the process and spent weeks teaching and encouraging players to perform to or beyond expectations.

3. Set realistic goals.
Even though winning the World Series championship would have been an amazing accomplishment for the A's, Beane says in the film his main priority was to demonstrate the value of the team's new methods, to "change the game."

In the 2002 season, the A's reached the playoffs but lost in the first round to the Minnesota Twins. However, the team set an American League record for winning 20 consecutive games during the regular season.

Two years later -- following the A's statistics-driven approach to player acquisition -- the Boston Red Sox won its first World Series championship in 86 years. The team won the title again in 2007.

So far, Beane and the A's are still hunting for a championship season.

Jason Fell

BIZ Experiences Staff

VP, Native Content

Jason Fell is the VP of Native Content, managing the BIZ Experiences Partner Studio, which creates dynamic and compelling content for our partners. He previously served as BIZ Experiences.com's managing editor and as the technology editor prior to that.

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business News

AI Will Create More Millionaires in the Next 5 Years Than the Internet Did in 2 Decades, According to Nvidia's CEO

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said that AI enables people to create new things, generating more opportunities to produce revenue.

Marketing

How to Make Sure ChatGPT Recommends Your Products — Not Your Competitor's

AI is changing how people shop — if you're still relying on SEO, you're already behind. Optimize for AI to stay visible.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Starting a Business

The One Real Problem You Must Solve to Make Your Startup Succeed

Some of the most successful startups didn't start with a business plan. They started with a problem. More specifically — a personal pain point.

Starting a Business

Her Self-Funded Brand Hit $25 Million Revenue Last Year — And 3 Secrets Keep It Growing Alongside Her 'Mischievous' Second Venture: 'Entrepreneurship Is a Mind Game'

Raised in a "very BIZ Experiencesial" family, Tanya Taylor always dreamed of starting a business of her own.

Business News

Chipotle's AI Tool 'Ava Cado' Is Cutting Hiring Time by 75%, According to the Company's CEO

Candidates can now go from application-to-hire in three and a half days. It used to take 12.