A few days apart, the hardware sector has experienced a series of dramatic news. iRobot, the producer of the iconic Roomba vacuum robots, along with Luminar, specialized in advanced lidar sensors, and Rad Power Bikes, a leader in the electric bicycle market, have all declared bankruptcy in close succession. Although they operate in completely different segments, these three failures reveal recurring dynamics that deserve in-depth analysis.
The numbers tell a story of decline
Rad Power Bikes is a quintessential example of this downward trajectory. Despite being a giant in the e-bike industry, the company quickly lost its dominant position. Financial data clearly show this regression: in 2023, revenues exceeded $123 million, then dropped to around $100 million in 2024, and plummeted to just $63 million during the current fiscal year.
The company had built its success on solid fundamentals: recognized build quality, effective branding strategies, and a communication capacity that, in the fragmented micromobility universe, represented a rare competitive advantage. During the pandemic, when alternative transportation gained prominence, Rad Power rode the wave of rapidly growing demand. However, it never managed to turn this temporary advantage into a lasting market position.
When specialization becomes a trap
Luminar follows a parallel path, albeit in a completely different sector. Founded in the early years of the last decade and emerging from the initial phase in 2017, the company aimed to democratize lidar sensor technology — tools that until then were extremely costly and bulky, mainly relegated to military and aerospace applications.
The vision was promising and initially generated considerable interest. Strategic agreements with major automakers like Volvo and Mercedes-Benz seemed to confirm the platform’s potential. However, over-reliance on these few partners proved fatal when the hype cycle around autonomous vehicles began to fade. The lack of diversification in applications and customers turned lidar sensors from a strategic opportunity into a structural vulnerability.
The iRobot case: when success itself breeds failure
iRobot represents the most paradoxical situation among the three. The Roomba brand had become essentially synonymous with vacuum robots in the eyes of the general public — a brand identification rarely achieved. Yet, this very dominance in the segment prevented the company from evolving and anticipating technological changes.
The attempt to exit via acquisition by Amazon could have been a solution, but regulatory hurdles from antitrust authorities blocked this route. Without this transaction, iRobot found itself trapped in its own niche, unable to generate the innovative push needed to compete in a rapidly evolving technological landscape.
Underlying structural elements
Examining these three parallel cases reveals common obstacles that superficial narratives tend to obscure. Global trade tariffs played a significant role, especially for companies like Rad Power, whose business model depended on importing components. When tariffs on Chinese imports were increased during previous administrations, many micromobility startups — from Boosted Boards to other players — suffered significant blows.
However, tariffs are more a symptom than a root cause. iRobot, in particular, exemplifies a deeper structural problem: over the past fifteen years, it has become nearly impossible to build and maintain fully localized supply chains within the United States. This dependence on China, while economically rational, created vulnerabilities that competitors could exploit — many simply copying proven models and solutions.
In Rad Power’s specific case, the battery issue was the decisive precipitating factor. The company faced an impossible choice: conducting the necessary recalls would inevitably lead to bankruptcy; however, not doing so would expose the company to even greater legal and reputational risks. The combination of pre-existing tariff pressures and this operational crisis created an unsustainable situation.
The missing narrative
When analyzing these failures, public discussion often focuses on a single decisive factor — for example, the blocked deal with Amazon in the case of iRobot. While this narrative is dramatic, it masks a more complex reality. These collapses were the result of structural problems that had existed for some time, simply accelerated by specific cyclical factors.
The real lesson lies in recognizing how initial success in a narrow segment becomes a difficult constraint to overcome as market conditions evolve. Companies that dominate a specific category struggle to reinvent themselves, especially when that category remains niche or when global technological dynamics change rapidly. In this context, even acquisition strategies that might seem obvious to regulators could, in hindsight, be transactions that might have preserved important industry players — a complex interplay between regulatory interventions and unintended consequences.
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The three hardware giants collapse: the lessons hidden behind the failures
A few days apart, the hardware sector has experienced a series of dramatic news. iRobot, the producer of the iconic Roomba vacuum robots, along with Luminar, specialized in advanced lidar sensors, and Rad Power Bikes, a leader in the electric bicycle market, have all declared bankruptcy in close succession. Although they operate in completely different segments, these three failures reveal recurring dynamics that deserve in-depth analysis.
The numbers tell a story of decline
Rad Power Bikes is a quintessential example of this downward trajectory. Despite being a giant in the e-bike industry, the company quickly lost its dominant position. Financial data clearly show this regression: in 2023, revenues exceeded $123 million, then dropped to around $100 million in 2024, and plummeted to just $63 million during the current fiscal year.
The company had built its success on solid fundamentals: recognized build quality, effective branding strategies, and a communication capacity that, in the fragmented micromobility universe, represented a rare competitive advantage. During the pandemic, when alternative transportation gained prominence, Rad Power rode the wave of rapidly growing demand. However, it never managed to turn this temporary advantage into a lasting market position.
When specialization becomes a trap
Luminar follows a parallel path, albeit in a completely different sector. Founded in the early years of the last decade and emerging from the initial phase in 2017, the company aimed to democratize lidar sensor technology — tools that until then were extremely costly and bulky, mainly relegated to military and aerospace applications.
The vision was promising and initially generated considerable interest. Strategic agreements with major automakers like Volvo and Mercedes-Benz seemed to confirm the platform’s potential. However, over-reliance on these few partners proved fatal when the hype cycle around autonomous vehicles began to fade. The lack of diversification in applications and customers turned lidar sensors from a strategic opportunity into a structural vulnerability.
The iRobot case: when success itself breeds failure
iRobot represents the most paradoxical situation among the three. The Roomba brand had become essentially synonymous with vacuum robots in the eyes of the general public — a brand identification rarely achieved. Yet, this very dominance in the segment prevented the company from evolving and anticipating technological changes.
The attempt to exit via acquisition by Amazon could have been a solution, but regulatory hurdles from antitrust authorities blocked this route. Without this transaction, iRobot found itself trapped in its own niche, unable to generate the innovative push needed to compete in a rapidly evolving technological landscape.
Underlying structural elements
Examining these three parallel cases reveals common obstacles that superficial narratives tend to obscure. Global trade tariffs played a significant role, especially for companies like Rad Power, whose business model depended on importing components. When tariffs on Chinese imports were increased during previous administrations, many micromobility startups — from Boosted Boards to other players — suffered significant blows.
However, tariffs are more a symptom than a root cause. iRobot, in particular, exemplifies a deeper structural problem: over the past fifteen years, it has become nearly impossible to build and maintain fully localized supply chains within the United States. This dependence on China, while economically rational, created vulnerabilities that competitors could exploit — many simply copying proven models and solutions.
In Rad Power’s specific case, the battery issue was the decisive precipitating factor. The company faced an impossible choice: conducting the necessary recalls would inevitably lead to bankruptcy; however, not doing so would expose the company to even greater legal and reputational risks. The combination of pre-existing tariff pressures and this operational crisis created an unsustainable situation.
The missing narrative
When analyzing these failures, public discussion often focuses on a single decisive factor — for example, the blocked deal with Amazon in the case of iRobot. While this narrative is dramatic, it masks a more complex reality. These collapses were the result of structural problems that had existed for some time, simply accelerated by specific cyclical factors.
The real lesson lies in recognizing how initial success in a narrow segment becomes a difficult constraint to overcome as market conditions evolve. Companies that dominate a specific category struggle to reinvent themselves, especially when that category remains niche or when global technological dynamics change rapidly. In this context, even acquisition strategies that might seem obvious to regulators could, in hindsight, be transactions that might have preserved important industry players — a complex interplay between regulatory interventions and unintended consequences.