There are an unlimited number of ways that you can disrupt corporations.
You have to study them and map their systems; the same way that mujahideen study and map the systems of occupying armies; to determine their vulnerabilities and the key points in their operations. Business is extremely vulnerable to pressure, share prices drop sometimes simply due to negative publicity, the smooth flow of any company’s operation always depends on an efficient interconnected network that is often exceedingly fragile.
In Bolivia in the 1990s, Bechtel took over the water utilities and gained so much control over the government that it made it illegal for people to collect rainwater, in order to force them to buy from Bechtel.
This led to a campaign against the company, particularly targeting the executives. The campaign included simple things like mass emails to the accounts of the CEO and others, protests at Bechtel facilities, and high-profile actions internationally at Bechtel plants in other countries. Bechtel withdrew, and Bolivia gained a genuinely democratic government.
We should note that one of the measures that was adopted against corporations in Latin America was the filing of legal challenges to their activities.
The multinationals learned their lesson from that, and this is why one of the first laws adopted under Sisi was a ban on “third party challenges” to the activities of foreign investors; effectively closing this avenue of struggle. But, as mentioned, there are many other options.