I worked for 40 years as a professional buyer, and often interacted with both CEO's and other high executives of major manufacturing corporations. Lots of things became awfully predictable beginning in the 80's, then accelerating in the 90's, when the "armchair quarterbacks" most certainly were not people like me, expected to make an honest living through hard work, but many of those big shots themselves imported from previous roles where they didn't have any real experience either, rapidly wrecking one longstanding corporation after another, yet themselves getting richer every time through golden parachute contracts, induced stock market upward burbs linked to smoke and mirrors "market-share" myths, and similar nonsense really bad for the long-term health of the corporation itself. Anyone from GE was the worst. Every time one of those guys got planted as head of a manufacturing company, I knew the end was near, and started looking for a new supplier. Just like politicians and big developers, these were high-energy types excellent at back-slapping schmoozing and throwing big parties, but otherwise incompetent. It didn't take all that much to know that anyone even slightly in the know from real hands-on experience knew a LOT more than that kind of CEO. Sometimes it was simply ludicrous.
But whenever I encountered a manufacturer headed by an engineer who had worked his way from the bottom up, I knew I had found a winner. Most of those were involved with Euro privately-held corporations, and extremely knowledgeable, while most US mfgs gaming the stock market were already jumping ship as fast as they could going international to avoid taxes and labor laws, and outsourcing to China to obtain bait-and-switch inventories as cheaply as possible, yet sold at high markup. A totally predictable trainwreck. No I'm no expert in the camera and film side of it; but distinct parts of that story are no doubt analogous. And at least in the aspect I was entrusted with juggling, I did it well enough to make my employers a helluva lot of money, and myself a decent retirement.