
When tech journalist Dan Lyons joined HubSpot at 52, he discovered a "frat house" culture that sparked FBI investigations and industry-wide debates. Called "the best book on Silicon Valley" by LA Times, this darkly hilarious expose reveals what really happens when startups prioritize culture over experience.
Dan Lyons, a New York Times bestselling author known for Disrupted: My Misadventure in the Start-Up Bubble, is a seasoned technology journalist and a keen observer of Silicon Valley culture. He brings decades of experience covering tech giants to his work.
Lyons is a former senior editor at Forbes and a writer for Newsweek. His experiences working at Boston startup HubSpot led him to write his incisive memoir, which reveals ageism, harmful corporate practices, and the ridiculous aspects of tech's "bro culture." He is also known for his satirical blog The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs (written as "Fake Steve Jobs") and his Emmy-nominated work as a writer on HBO's Silicon Valley.
Lyons has continued to explore modern workplace dynamics in his subsequent books, Lab Rats: How Silicon Valley Made Work Miserable for the Rest of Us and STFU: The Power of Keeping Your Mouth Shut in an Endlessly Noisy World. As a regular commentator in The Guardian and Wired, and a guest on NPR and BBC programs, Lyons combines thorough investigation with dark humor. Disrupted quickly became a cultural phenomenon, appearing on bestseller lists in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and San Francisco Chronicle due to its uncompromising critique of startup mythology.
Disrupted chronicles Dan Lyons' chaotic two-year stint at HubSpot, exposing Silicon Valley's toxic startup culture through absurd workplace rituals, age discrimination, and growth-at-all-costs mentalities. The memoir blends dark humor with sharp critiques of venture capital-driven tech bubbles, "bro culture" management tactics, and the dehumanizing effects of data-obsessed corporate environments.
Tech professionals, startup employees, and anyone analyzing modern corporate culture will find value. It’s particularly relevant for mid-career workers navigating ageism, HR leaders addressing workplace toxicity, and readers who enjoyed exposés like Bad Blood or Brotopia.
Yes – it’s a gripping, darkly comic insider account that became a New York Times bestseller. While some criticize Lyons’ cynical perspective, the book remains essential for understanding Silicon Valley’s cultural pitfalls.
Lyons lambasts toxic positivity (forced enthusiasm), ageism (50+ workers as "dinosaurs"), and growth hacking ethics that prioritize vanity metrics over sustainable products. He details cult-like employee indoctrination via "culture code" slide decks and mandatory fun activities.
HubSpot emerges as a dystopian "adult daycare" with:
"HubSpotters are like white blood cells attacking a virus when they sense dissent." This line captures Lyons’ view of the company’s aggressive conformity demands. Another viral quote: "Startups are a human contact sport played without rules."
While Siva Vaidhyanathan analyzes systemic tech monopolies, Lyons focuses on grassroots cultural rot – making Disrupted a visceral complement to academic tech criticism. Both books warn of unchecked corporate power over daily life.
His 20+ years covering tech (Forbes, Newsweek) provide razor-sharp observations about Silicon Valley’s evolution from innovation hub to "money-laundering scheme for rich investors".
Detractors argue Lyons:
Its warnings about AI-driven productivity monitoring, quiet cutting layoffs, and Gen Z/Millennial managerial gaps anticipate current workplace crises.
Lab Rats expands Disrupted’s critiques into a systemic analysis of dehumanizing workplaces, citing case studies from Amazon to Uber. Read together, they form a manifesto against modern corporate "science experiment" management.
Ressentez le livre à travers la voix de l'auteur
Transformez les connaissances en idées captivantes et riches en exemples
Capturez les idées clés en un éclair pour un apprentissage rapide
Profitez du livre de manière ludique et engageante
HubSpot is leading a revolution.
Make love not spam.
Harder to get into than Harvard.
Bleeding orange with religious devotion.
Change is constant.
Décomposez les idées clés de Disrupted en points faciles à comprendre pour découvrir comment les équipes innovantes créent, collaborent et grandissent.
Condensez Disrupted en indices de mémoire rapides mettant en évidence les principes clés de franchise, de travail d'équipe et de résilience créative.

Découvrez Disrupted à travers des récits vivants qui transforment les leçons d'innovation en moments mémorables et applicables.
Posez n'importe quelle question, choisissez la voix et co-créez des idées qui résonnent vraiment avec vous.

Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco

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At 52, you're supposed to have figured things out. Career stable. Reputation solid. Life on cruise control. Then one Friday morning, everything implodes. The call comes: your position at Newsweek-technology editor, dream job, covering fusion energy and artificial intelligence-is being eliminated. Two weeks' notice. No severance. Health insurance gone. Your editor's parting words cut deeper than the pink slip itself: "I think they just want to hire younger people. They can take your salary and hire five kids right out of college." Welcome to the modern economy, where experience becomes a liability and gray hair marks you for extinction. With twins at home, a wife who'd just left her teaching job due to chronic illness, and zero income, desperation makes strange bedfellows. That's how a respected journalist who once interviewed Bill Gates and ran a wildly popular satirical blog impersonating Steve Jobs ended up at HubSpot-a Boston marketing software startup preparing for its IPO. What followed wasn't just a career pivot. It was a descent into corporate absurdity so extreme it triggered an FBI investigation.