In early 2023, something unthinkable happened in the world of tech and finance: Silicon Valley Bank, the trusted institution behind thousands of startups, collapsed almost overnight.I remember watching the headlines roll in with disbelief. Not because banks haven't failed before, they have, but because this one wasn't just any bank. SVB was woven into the fabric of innovation itself. From fledgling founders with dreams to billion-dollar unicorns, it was the financial backbone of the most risk-tolerant, forward-thinking corner of the economy. And in a matter of hours, that trust was shattered.As a pharmacist, entrepreneur, and observer of how systems either support or fail people, I saw something deeper unfold. This wasn't just a banking failure - it was a wake-up call for an entire ecosystem that had grown too comfortable, too fast, and too reliant on institutions it barely understood. Founders with millions in venture capital discovered they were only insured for $250,000. Payrolls were at risk. Investors panicked. And the ripple effects reached far beyond tech campuses in California.I wrote this book to unpack what really happened-and why it matters. It's not just about bank balance sheets or economic theory. It's about the human cost of blind spots, the fragility of systems we assume are fail-proof, and the lessons no innovator, investor, or policymaker can afford to ignore.Whether you're a founder, a professional in finance, or simply a curious reader trying to make sense of what went wrong, this book will take you inside the rise, the reckoning, and the aftermath of the largest bank failure since 2008, and what it means for the future of innovation.- Oluchi Ike