Many American companies have been lauded for their rapid rise to 
greatness, a process that sometimes takes less than a decade. These 
firms become leaders in their industries, are renowned for innovation, 
phenomenal growth, and, in the case of public corporations, their 
soaring share prices. Google Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOG) usually makes the list, as does Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL).
 At the other end of the scale are well-known firms that are so crippled
 they go bankrupt or disappear entirely. Recently, these have included 
AMR, the parent of American Airlines, Borders, and Eastman Kodak.
Somewhere in the middle — between the companies that do phenomenally 
well and those that fail — are ones that were once leaders in their 
industries but have fallen hopelessly behind. They may remain in business
 for years or even decades after their best days. Their executives 
struggle to find better strategies, and often their boards seek new 
management. But, in the case of companies that fall permanently into 
trouble and well behind the leaders in their industries, the chance of a
 turnaround has passed. Competitors have taken too much market share, 
and often have stronger balance sheets. Or, their products and services 
are no longer in demand because of changes in the overall economy or the
 sectors in which they operate.
 
There were a few companies that didn't appear on the list and appear heading for the grave yard and they are sears, best buys k-mart and I agree with the other readers that face book should be included. The latter company was over-hyped and price was insane and it started to take on water very quickly. You will know them by their fruits.
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