Zrevnur: "growth ambitions" ~= "greedy for more power"? The way I understand 'greed' it is not limited to personal wealth.
mqstout: No. Growth ambitions can intersect with and be part of greed, but they are different.
The context here is CDP/CDPR. 'Growth ambitions' means desire for more power for the ones in charge. Aka "I want more money/power". While this isnt exactly identical to greed my '~=' was meant to imply that.
Also I found this:
https://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/116720/CD_Projekt_To_Go_Public_In_Deal_With_Tech_Company_Optimus.php Not sure how much value the intent statements from company/management have but the facts should be more reliable.
mqstout: Was it greed when my friend's wife decided to quit her day job to expand her evenings and weekends side gig of baking cookies into a full-time thing? Or when she decided to take on a loan to scale up production a little bit? It's a smaller scale, but exactly when the decision of "loan? get investors?" would come up. They have an awesome family business now, are able to retire in the future (when they previously had no chances of it), have more time with their family, and are super happy with what they're doing.
Personal freedom at stake. So quite different.
mqstout: Is it greed when a community food bank decides, "let's grow and support the whole city or county" and seeks to find donors to expand operations, maybe even selling some naming rights? No, certainly not. But that's exactly the same kind of decision when a company would make a decision "get investors? or not?".
Greed is a person thing. If you want to make a proper example you need to get a greedy or not-greedy person into it.
mqstout: Is it greed when a video game company thinks they have an awesome product they believe in and are excited to make and get out there to players, but they don't quite currently have the resources to actualize it in the way they feel would be be best for their end product? Maybe they decide to bring in investors to fund the ambitious, creative dream.
Again, companies dont think. People think.
mqstout: Is it greed to get outside investment to try to build a store that's doing well-enough on its own, but currently is growing at a much slower rate than its greed-fueled competitors in a way that harms its long-term viability because of the network effect? Especially if that store is better for the consumers than the competition, but doesn't have as much clout because of back-room dealings and irresponsible and consumer-disrespectful behavior?
Same - you are excluding the relevant part - the person/s which are greedy or not - and talking about abstracta.
mqstout: The above are all examples of ambitious business growth, none of which have greed as its element.
Excluding your first example: There is no recognizable greed because there arent any persons in your examples. In CDP/R case the managemant/owners are very notable persons who cant be easily (if at all) replaced. This is quite different from many other publicly traded companies. And in the above link they also say "We have gained all this while retaining control of the business, which was essential to us." - admitting the importance of that personal power.
Edit grm fix