Organizations
How companies, institutions, and movements embody the sixteen values.
Walmart
Security through price
Walmart built the world's largest retailer on a single value proposition: stable, low prices that make the necessities of life reliably affordable for people who cannot afford variation. Sam Walton's obsession with cost control, logistics efficiency, and supplier leverage all served the same end - ensuring the price stays low regardless of what the environment does. The commitment to EDLP (Every Day Low Prices) is a security-axis value expressed as a business model. Walmart's customers are not shopping for experience; they are shopping for stability.
Walmart
Security through price
Walmart built the world's largest retailer on a single value proposition: stable, low prices that make the necessities of life reliably affordable for people who cannot afford variation. Sam Walton's obsession with cost control, logistics efficiency, and supplier leverage all served the same end - ensuring the price stays low regardless of what the environment does. The commitment to EDLP (Every Day Low Prices) is a security-axis value expressed as a business model. Walmart's customers are not shopping for experience; they are shopping for stability.
Making consumer goods affordable to the working class in communities that had no other access to variety and price competition. Logistics innovation that changed supply chain management across every industry. Employment at scale in rural and suburban communities where alternative employment is scarce.
Supplier pressure that offshored manufacturing and eroded the manufacturing employment that Walmart's own customer base depended on. Labor practices that have made Walmart the subject of more class-action suits than any private employer in American history. Market dominance that has eliminated local retail ecosystems in thousands of communities.
The opening of the first Sam's Club in 1983 - the extension of the low-price logic to bulk membership retail, demonstrating that the security-oriented customer would pay for access to stability.
Berkshire Hathaway
Security through patience
Berkshire Hathaway operationalizes the security axis with a specificity that makes it unlike any other investment vehicle at its scale. Buffett's core principle - buy good businesses at fair prices and hold them forever - is a security-oriented investment strategy disguised as a conglomerate. The $150 billion cash position maintained through market peaks is not indecision; it is the conviction that staying solvent through every environment is the prerequisite for every other kind of return. The culture values predictability, low debt, and durable competitive advantages above all else.
Berkshire Hathaway
Security through patience
Berkshire Hathaway operationalizes the security axis with a specificity that makes it unlike any other investment vehicle at its scale. Buffett's core principle - buy good businesses at fair prices and hold them forever - is a security-oriented investment strategy disguised as a conglomerate. The $150 billion cash position maintained through market peaks is not indecision; it is the conviction that staying solvent through every environment is the prerequisite for every other kind of return. The culture values predictability, low debt, and durable competitive advantages above all else.
Decades of compounding that have made Berkshire shareholders wealthy through patience rather than speculation. A management philosophy that acquires businesses and does not interfere with them. A corporate culture with essentially no overhead - two people at headquarters, no strategy consultants, no management consultants.
A conglomerate structure that produces no coherent accountability for the businesses it holds. A cash management philosophy that has cost returns in environments where deployment was the correct move. An ownership concentration that ties the institution's future to the health of two very old men.
The 2008 financial crisis - Berkshire deployed capital when everyone else was pulling it, and the terms extracted from Goldman Sachs, GE, and Bank of America in exchange for that capital demonstrated what security-orientation looks like when the environment needs it.
State Farm
A good neighbor because reliability is the product
State Farm was founded by a farmer who believed agricultural mutual insurance could be managed with lower overhead and more local accountability than large commercial insurers. The mutual company structure, in which policyholders are owners, is an institutional expression of the security value: the company's commercial interest is aligned with policyholders' interest in claims payment rather than diverging from it. Over a century, State Farm became the largest property and casualty insurer in the United States by making reliability the consistent and non-negotiable brand promise.
State Farm
A good neighbor because reliability is the product
State Farm was founded by a farmer who believed agricultural mutual insurance could be managed with lower overhead and more local accountability than large commercial insurers. The mutual company structure, in which policyholders are owners, is an institutional expression of the security value: the company's commercial interest is aligned with policyholders' interest in claims payment rather than diverging from it. Over a century, State Farm became the largest property and casualty insurer in the United States by making reliability the consistent and non-negotiable brand promise.
Claim payment speed and local agent presence that competitors have not matched. Financial strength allowing State Farm to pay claims in catastrophic disaster years when less capitalized insurers have failed. A mutual ownership structure returning profits to policyholders rather than extracting them for external shareholders.
Catastrophic loss years in which even mutual insurers face the actuarial reality that reliable claims payment requires premium increases that customers experience as betrayal of the reliability promise. The withdrawal from California and Florida home insurance markets under climate-driven loss pressure, demonstrating the limits of the security promise when environmental risk becomes uninsurable at sustainable premiums.
The 1992 Hurricane Andrew response, in which State Farm paid $3.5 billion in claims from a single event - demonstrating both the strength of the security promise and the actuarial challenge of maintaining it when the promise is tested at maximum scale.
Federal Reserve
Stability as the mandate
The Federal Reserve was created after the Panic of 1907 demonstrated that the United States economy needed an institutional lender of last resort to prevent bank runs from cascading into economic collapse. The dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment is a security-orientation written into law: the institution exists to prevent the economic instability that destroys the material security of ordinary people. Every interest rate decision, every open market operation, and every emergency credit facility deployed in a crisis is an attempt to maintain the stable conditions in which economic life can be conducted.
Federal Reserve
Stability as the mandate
The Federal Reserve was created after the Panic of 1907 demonstrated that the United States economy needed an institutional lender of last resort to prevent bank runs from cascading into economic collapse. The dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment is a security-orientation written into law: the institution exists to prevent the economic instability that destroys the material security of ordinary people. Every interest rate decision, every open market operation, and every emergency credit facility deployed in a crisis is an attempt to maintain the stable conditions in which economic life can be conducted.
The 2008 financial crisis response, in which unprecedented Federal Reserve intervention prevented the collapse of the payment system and the savings of millions of ordinary people. Decades of inflation management keeping the value of wages and savings stable enough for long-term planning. A lender-of-last-resort function preventing bank runs from becoming depressions in multiple instances.
Monetary policy conducted by an unelected institution operating behind procedural opacity that makes democratic accountability for its decisions structurally difficult. The post-2008 quantitative easing program, which stabilized the financial system by inflating asset prices in ways that primarily benefited the already-wealthy. The 2021 assessment of inflation as transitory, which delayed policy response and contributed to the sharpest rate increase cycle in 40 years.
Ben Bernanke's declaration in 2008 that the Fed would do whatever it takes - an institutional commitment to security so unconditional that it created lasting questions about the moral hazard boundaries of the security guarantee.
IKEA
Good design is not a luxury
IKEA was founded on the conviction that well-designed, functional furniture should be available to people of ordinary means rather than reserved for those who can afford premium prices. Ingvar Kamprad's operating philosophy held that unnecessary cost is a form of injustice, and the flat-pack model, the in-store warehouse, and the self-assembly requirement were all mechanisms for eliminating the costs that separated good design from the people who needed it most. The result is the most widely distributed design vocabulary in the history of interior furnishing.
IKEA
Good design is not a luxury
IKEA was founded on the conviction that well-designed, functional furniture should be available to people of ordinary means rather than reserved for those who can afford premium prices. Ingvar Kamprad's operating philosophy held that unnecessary cost is a form of injustice, and the flat-pack model, the in-store warehouse, and the self-assembly requirement were all mechanisms for eliminating the costs that separated good design from the people who needed it most. The result is the most widely distributed design vocabulary in the history of interior furnishing.
Functional, aesthetically coherent home furnishing accessible to first-apartment residents, students, and households rebuilding after financial disruption. Supply chain and manufacturing innovation that made scale and cost reduction compatible with reasonable product quality. A store format that functions as recreational destination and product laboratory simultaneously.
A manufacturing and sourcing model whose cost discipline has at various points produced documented labor and environmental standard failures in supplier countries. Flat-pack furniture whose assembly process is a documented source of relationship stress. A business model premised on replacement economics rather than durability, generating significant furniture waste.
The 1953 opening of the first IKEA showroom in Älmhult, Sweden, where competitors had conspired to prevent IKEA from purchasing through normal wholesale channels, forcing the company to source directly from manufacturers and accidentally inventing its low-cost supply chain model.