Competition is for Losers with Peter Thiel (How to Start a Startup 2014: 5)
By Y Combinator
Summary
## Key takeaways - **Monopolies create value, competition destroys it.**: Businesses are valuable if they create value and capture a percentage of it. Monopolies, by definition, capture a larger percentage of the value they create, leading to more stable and profitable businesses compared to perfectly competitive markets where value is competed away. [00:57], [03:37] - **Monopolists lie about competition, competitors lie about uniqueness.**: Companies with monopolies often pretend to be in highly competitive markets to avoid regulation, while companies in competitive markets claim uniqueness to attract investment. This distortion makes it difficult to assess the true nature of a business. [05:33], [06:59] - **Startups should target small, overlooked markets to build monopolies.**: Rather than aiming for large, existing markets, startups should focus on niche markets that are initially too small to attract significant competition. By dominating these small markets, they can gradually expand and build a monopoly. [13:28], [14:36] - **Aim to be the last mover, not the first.**: The most valuable companies are often the last ones to enter and dominate a category, rather than the first. This 'last mover advantage' ensures long-term value, as most of a company's worth comes from future cash flows. [18:40], [27:10] - **Competition is often a psychological trap, not a sign of value.**: Humans are naturally mimetic and attracted to competition, often mistaking crowded markets for validation of value. This can lead individuals and companies into highly competitive, low-margin situations rather than pursuing unique, valuable monopolies. [37:03], [38:14]
Topics Covered
- Value Creation vs. Capture: The Formula for a Valuable Business
- Competition is for Losers: Why Monopolies are More Stable
- Startup Strategy: Conquer Small Markets First, Then Expand
- Competition is for Losers: Rethinking Human Nature
- The Insanity of Crowds and Competition
Full Transcript
all right good afternoon uh today's
speaker is Peter teal Peter was the
founder of PayPal and paler and Founders
fund and has invested in uh most of the
tech companies in in silica Valley and
he's going to talk about strategy and
competition thank you for coming Peter
awesome thanks uh Sam thanks for
inviting me thanks for for having me uh
I I sort of have a I have a single eay
FS that I'm completely obsessed with in
um on on the business side which is that
uh if you're starting a company if
you're the founder entrepreneur starting
a company you always want to aim for
Monopoly and um and that uh and you want
to always avoid competition and so uh
hence uh competition is for losers uh
something we'll be talking about
today I'd like to um I'd like to start
by saying something about um the the
basic idea of uh when you start one the
companies um how you go about uh
creating value and there's this question
what makes a business valuable and I
want I want to suggest that there's
basically a very simple uh very simple
formula that um um you you have a
valuable company if two things are true
uh number one that it creates X dollars
of value for the world and number two
that you capture y% of X and and the
critical thing that uh that I think
people always miss in the sort of
analysis is that X and Y are completely
independent variables and so um X can be
very Big Y can be very small X can be of
intermediate size and if Y is reasonably
big you can still get a very big
business so to create a valuable company
you have to basically uh both create
something of value and capture some
fraction of the value of what you've
created and sort of just to just to
illustrate this as a as a contrast um
there's if you sort of compare the US
airline industry with a company like
Google on search um if you sort of
measure by the size of these industries
you could you could say that airlines
are still more important than search if
you just measure it say by revenues
there's 195 billion in uh domestic
revenues in 201 uh 2012 Google had uh
just north of 50 billion um and and so
and certainly sort of on some intuitive
level if you said uh if you were given a
choice and said well do you want to get
rid of a all air travel or do you want
to get rid of your ability to use search
engines the intuition would be that air
travel is something that's more
important than search and this is of
course just the domestic numbers if you
looked at this globally um airlines are
much much bigger than um than uh than
than than than search or than Google is
but uh but the profit margins are quite
a bit less uh you know they were
marginally profitable in 2012 12 uh I
think the entire 100-year history of the
airline industry the cumulative profits
in the US have been approximately zero
know companies make money they
episodically go bankrupt they get
recapitalized and you sort of cycle and
and repeat and this is reflected in you
know the the combined market
capitalization of the of the airline
Industries maybe uh something um of the
US airline industry something like a
quarter that of Google so so uh you have
you have a search engine much much
smaller than than air travel but much
more valuable and I think this this
reflects these very different uh
valuations on X and
Y so um you know if we look at perfect
competition um you know there are sort
of there's some pros and cons to the
world of perfect competition um on a
high level uh uh it's always um this is
what you study in econ one it's always
it's easy to model which I think is why
econ professors like talking about
perfect competition um it somehow is
efficient especially in a world where
things are static because you have all
the consumer surplus gets captured by
everybody and uh and politically it's uh
What uh what we're what we're told is
good in our society that you you want to
have competition and this is somehow a
good thing um of course there are a lot
of negatives uh it's it's generally not
that good if you're you're um you're
involved in anything that's hyper
competitive um because you often don't
make money I'll come back to this a
little bit later so uh so I think at one
end of the spectrum you have uh
industries that are perfectly
competitive and at the other end of the
spectrum um you have things that um I
would say are monopolies and um and
they're you know they're much stable
longer term businesses you have more
Capital uh and um and if you get a
creative Monopoly for inventing
something new I think it's symptomatic
of having created something something
really valuable um and so I do think
this you know the the the sort of the
the the extreme binary view of the world
I I always articulate is that there are
exactly two kinds of businesses in this
world there are businesses that are
perfectly competitive and there are
businesses that are monopolies and um
there's shockingly little that is in
between and uh this dichotomy is not
understood very well because uh people
uh are constantly lying about the nature
of the businesses they're in um and this
is why this is in my mind this is the
most important is not necessarily the
most important thing in business but I
think it's the most important business
idea that people don't understand that
there are just the two kinds of
businesses and so let me say a little
bit about the lies that people tell and
so you basically um the basic uh if you
sort of imagine that there was a
spectrum of companies from perfect
competition to Monopoly um the um the
apparent differences are quite small
because the people who have monopolies
pretend not to they will basically say
uh you know and it's because you don't
want to get regulated by the government
you don't want the government to come
after you so you will never say that you
have Monopoly so anyone who has a
monopoly will pretend that they're in
incredible competition and on the other
end of the spectrum if you are
incredibly competitive um and if you're
in some sort of business where you will
never make any money um you will be
tempted to tell a lie that goes in the
other direction where you will say that
you're doing something unique um that um
is is somehow uh less competitive than
it looks because um because you want to
you will want to differentiate you want
to try to trct Capital or something like
that so if the monopolists pretend not
to have monopolies the non- monopolists
pretend to have monopolies the apparent
difference is very small whereas the
real difference I I would submit is is
actually quite big and so there's this
Distortion that happens because of the
lies people tell about their businesses
and the lies are sort of in these these
opposite direction let me let me drill a
little bit down further on the uh the
way these lies
work and so um you know
the the the basic uh lie you tell as a
non-m monopoly is that we're in a very
small Market the basic lie you tell as a
monopoly is that the market you're in is
much bigger than it looks and so um and
so typically if you want to think of
this in sort of set theoretic terms you
could say that a monopoly tells um a a
lie where you describe your business as
the union of these vastly different
markets and the non- monopolist
describes it as the intersection so that
uh in effect um if you're if you're a
non- monopolist you will rhetorically
describe your Market as super small
you're the only person in that market if
you have monopo you will describe it as
super big and um and there's lots of
competition in it so uh some examples of
how this how this works in practice uh
so I always use restaurants as the
example of a terrible business this
always you know sort of my idea is you
know capitalism and competition are
antonyms um capitalist is someone who
accumulates Capital world of perfect
competition is a world where all the
capital gets competed away so uh you're
opening a restaurant business no one
wants to invest because you just lose
money so you have to tell some
idiosyncratic narrative and you will say
something like well we're the only
British food restaurant in paloalto so
it's British paloalto and uh and of
course that's too small a market because
people may be able to drive all the way
to Mountain View or even Meno Park um
and there probably are no people who eat
nothing but British food at least no
people who are still
alive and so so that is um that's that's
a sort of a fictitiously narrow Market
um there's there's sort of a Hollywood
version of this where uh the way movies
always get pitched is you know okay it's
like a college football star you know uh
joins an elite group of hackers to um to
catch the shark that killed his
friend um sorry and so that's now that
is a movie that has not yet been
made but um but but the question is is
is that the right category or is the
correct category it's just another movie
in which case you know there are lots of
those it's super competitive incredibly
hard to make money no one ever makes
money in Hollywood uh doing movies or
it's really really
hard and so you always have this
question about does the intersection
does is it real does it make sense does
it have value that one should ask and of
course there are startup versions of
this where you and the the sort of the
bad really bad versions you just take a
whole series of buzzword sharing mobile
social apps you combine them and you
have some kind of uh narrative and
whether or not that's a real business or
not uh is is uh um is it's generally a
bad sign so it's it's almost this
pattern recognition when you have this
rhetoric of the sort of intersections um
it it it generally does not work the
something of somewhere is really mostly
just the nothing of nowhere and it's
like the Stanford of North
Dakota uh one of a kind but it's not
Stanford um so let's look at the
opposite the opposite law is um if you
are uh let's say uh the uh the search uh
company that's down the street from here
and has about a happy 66% market share
um and uh is you know is completely
complely dominant in the search Market
um Google has not almost never describes
itself as a search engine these days um
and instead it uh it describes itself in
all these different ways so it sometimes
says it's an advertising company so if
it was search you'd say wow this this
like it's it's it has this huge market
share that's really really crazy it's
it's like a incredible Monopoly it's
much bigger than it's much a much more
robust Monopoly than Microsoft ever had
in the 90s maybe that's why it's making
so much money um but if you uh if you
say it's an advertising Market you could
say well there's search advertising is
17 billion and that's part of uh online
advertising which is much bigger and
then you know all us advertising is
bigger and then by the time you get to
Global advertising that's close to 500
billion and so you're talking about 3
and a half% so um a tiny part of uh of
this much larger
market um or uh if you don't want to be
an advertising company you can always
say that you're a technology
company
um and so
um sorry let me see um and so the and
and so um and and the technology Market
is something like a one trillion Doll
Market and the narrative that you tell
as Google in the in the technology
Market is um well we're competing with
all the car companies with our
self-driving cars we're competing with
Apple on TVs and
iPhones uh we're competing with Facebook
we're competing with Microsoft on um on
Office Products we're competing with
Amazon on cloud services and so we are
in this giant technology Market where
there's competition in every direction
uh you you look and uh no we're not the
Monopoly the government's looking for
and we should not get regulated in any
way whatsoever and so I think one has to
always be super aware that there are
these uh these very powerful incentives
to to uh to distort uh the nature of
these markets one way or or the
other so um you know the the the
evidence of narrow markets in the uh in
the tech industry is um is if you
basically just uh if you look at sort of
the some of the big tech companies Apple
Google Microsoft Amazon um they just um
they've just been building up cash for
um year after year and you have these
incredibly High profit margins and I
would I would say that the the one of
the reasons the tech industry in the US
has been uh has been so successful
financially is because it's it's prone
to creating all these Monopoly like
businesses and that's that's um and it's
reflected uh by the fact that these
companies just accumulate so much cash
they don't even know what what to do
with it Beyond a certain point um and
so so let me say um let me say a few
things about uh about how to how to
build a monopoly and I think uh I think
the one of the sort of very
counterintuitive ideas that comes out of
this Monopoly uh thread is that um you
want to go after small markets if you're
a
startup um you know you want to get to a
monopoly you're starting a new company
you want to get to Monopoly um Monopoly
is you have a large share of a market
how do you get to a large share of a
market you start with a really small
market and you take over that whole
market and then uh and then over time
you find ways to expand that market in
in concentric circles and uh the thing
that's always a big mistake is going
after a giant market on on day one
because that's typically evidence that
um that you somehow haven't defined the
categories correctly that and it's it
normally means that there's going to be
too much competition in one way or
another and so I think almost all the
successful companies uh in Silicon
Valley had some model of starting with
small markets and expanding and you know
if you take Amazon you start with you
start with you know just um a bookstore
we have all the books in the world so
it's it's a it's a it's a better
bookstore than anybody else has in the
world when it starts in the 90s it's
online there's things you can do you
can't do before and then you gradually
expand into all sorts of different forms
of e-commerce and other things beyond
that um you know eBay you start with Pez
dispensers you move on to beanie babies
and eventually uh it's it's all these
different um auctions for all these
sorts of different Goods um and uh and
what was very counterintuitive about
what's very counterintuitive about many
of these companies is they often start
with markets that are so small that
people don't think um they don't think
that they're uh valuable at all when
when you get
started um the the PayPal version of
this was uh was you know we started with
uh with power sellers on eBay which was
about 20,000 people when when we first
saw this happening in December of 99
January 2000 right after we launched uh
there was a sense that uh that these
were all um it was such a small Market
it was terrible we thought these were
terrible customers to have it's just
people selling junk on the internet why
in the world do we want to be going
after this Market but um but you you
know you there was a way to get a
product that was much better for
everybody in that market you could um
and we got to something like 25 30% you
know Market penetration in 2 or 3 months
and you got some Walkin you got brand
recognition and you're able to to build
the business from there so um so I
always think these um these these very
small markets are are quite underrated
uh the Facebook version of this I always
give is that uh you know the initial
Market at Facebook was 10,000 people at
Harvard it went from 0 to 60% market
share in 10 days that was a very
auspicious start um the way this gets
analyzed in Business Schools is always
um that's ridiculous it's such a small
Market it can't have any value at all
and so I think the business school
analysis of Facebook early on or of
PayPal early on or of eBay early on is
that the markets were perhaps so small
as to have uh almost no value uh and
they they would have had little value
had they stayed small but it turned out
there were ways to then grow them
concentrically and that's what made them
uh that's what made them so valuable um
now I think the opposite version of this
is always where you have super big
markets and um and I there's so much so
many different things that went wrong
with all the clean tech companies in the
last decade but uh but one one theme
that ran through almost all of them was
they all started with massive markets
and every clean tech PowerPoint
presentation that one saw in the Years
2005 to 2008 which was sort of the clean
tech bubble in in Silicon Valley started
with we're in the energy Market we're in
a market that's measured in hundreds of
billions or trillions of dollars and um
and then you know once you're sort of a
a minnow in a vast ocean um that's not a
good place to be that means that you
have tons of competitors and you don't
even know who all the competitors are
and so you want to be you know you want
to be a one-of-a-kind company where it's
the only one in a small ecosystem you
don't want to be the fourth online pet
food company you don't want to be the
10th thin film solar panel company you
don't want to be the 100th restaurant in
paloalto um you know restaurant industry
is a trillion dollar industry so if you
do a market size analysis youd include
restaurants are a fantastic business to
go into and it's often large markets
large existing markets typically mean
that you have uh tons of competition
very very hard to uh to differentiate so
the first very
counterintuitive int uh idea is is to go
after small markets often markets that
are so small people don't even notice
them they don't think they make sense
that's where you get a foothold and then
um and then if those markets are able to
expand you can scale into a big monopo
business um you know um a second uh sort
of there's sort of several different uh
characteristics of these Monopoly
businesses um that I like to um focus on
and U there's probably no no sort of
single formula to it and I I always
think that uh that in technology there's
always a sense that you know the history
of technology such that every every
moment happens only once and so you know
the next Mark Zuckerberg won't build a
social network the next uh uh the next
Larry Page won't be building a search
engine the next uh Bill Gates won't be
building an operating system and if
you're copying these people you're not
learning from them but it's it's and so
um there is always um these very unique
businesses that are doing something
that's not been done before end up um
end up having the potential to be a
monopoly if you're you know the the the
opening the opening line in um Anna Ken
is that all happy companies sorry all
happy families all happy families are
alike all unhappy families are unhappy
in their own special way and the
opposite is true in business where I
think all happy companies are different
because they're doing something very
unique all unhappy companies are alike
because they fail to escape the
essential sameness that is competition
and so so one one sort of characteristic
of a monopoly technology company is some
sort of proprietary technology um my
sort of crazy somewhat arbitrary rule of
thumb is you want to have a technology
that's an order of magnitude better than
the next best thing so Amazon had over
10 times as many books I it's maybe not
that Hightech but you figure out a way
to sell 10 times as many books in an
efficient online way you know PayPal the
alternative for PayPal was using um was
using uh uh checks to uh send money on
eBay took 7 to 10 days to clear PayPal
could do it than 10 times as fast so you
want to have some sort of very uh very
powerful Improvement in some um on in
some order maybe an order of magnitude
Improvement on some key Dimension um of
course you know if you if you actually
come with something totally new um it's
it's it's just like an infinite
Improvement so I would say the the
iPhone was the first smartphone that
worked and so that's you know that's
like maybe maybe not infinite but it's
sort of definitely an order of magnitude
or more of an improvement so I think uh
the the technology is designed to give
you a massive Delta over over the next
the next best thing I think um I think
there often are network effects that can
kick in that really help the thing
that's very um and these these lead to
monopolies over time the thing that's
very tricky about Network effects is uh
they're often uh they're often very hard
to get started and so um so even though
everyone understands how valuable they
are uh there's always this incredible
tricky question why is it valuable to
the first person who's doing something
um economies of scale uh if you have
something that with very high fixed
costs very low marginal costs uh that's
typically a monopoly like business and
then um then there's this thing uh of of
branding uh which is sort of like just
uh this idea that gets lodged in
people's brains I I never quite
understand how branding Works uh so I
never invest in companies where it's
just about branding but it is I think a
real phenomenon
that uh that creates uh that creates
real value I think one of the things I'm
going to come back to this a little bit
towards the end but one of the things
that's very striking is that software
businesses are often um are for some
reason uh very good at some of these
things they're especially good at the
economies of scale part because the
marginal cost of software is zero and so
if you get something that works in
software um it's often significantly
better than the existing solution and
then you have these tremendous economies
of scale and you can scale fairly
quickly so even if the market start
small um you can grow your business
quickly enough to uh stay um stay at the
same size as the growing market and uh
and maintain the sort of Monopoly uh
Power now the critical thing about these
monopolies is um is it's it's not enough
to have a monopoly for just a moment the
critical thing is to have one that lasts
over time um and so you know in Silicon
value is the sort of idea that you want
to be the first mover and I I always
think it's it's in some ways um the
better framing is you want to be the
last mover you want to be the last
company in a category those are the ones
that are really valuable Microsoft was
the last operating system at least for
many decades uh Google is the last
search engine Facebook will be valuable
if it turns out to be the last social
networking site and um and one way to
one way to think of this uh last mover
uh value is this idea that most to the
value in these companies exists far in
the future um if you do sort of a
discounted cash flow analysis of a
business you look at you have sort of
all these profit streams you have a
growth rate the growth rate's much
higher than the discount rate and so
most of the value exists far in the
future I did I did this exercise at
PayPal in March of 2001 we had been in
business for about 27 months and um and
we sort of had you know the growth rate
was 100% a year we were discounting
future cash flows by about 30% and it
turned out that about 3/4 of the value
of the business as of 2001 came from
cash flows in years 2011 and Beyond and
um and whenever you do the math on any
of these tech companies you get to an
answer that's something like that so if
you are trying to analyze any of the
tech companies in Silicon Valley Airbnb
Twitter uh Facebook um any emerging
internet companies all the ones in y
combinator um the math tells you that
three qus 80 85% of the value is coming
from cash flows in years 2024 and Beyond
it's very very far in the future and uh
and so one of the things that uh we
always overvalue in Silicon Valley is
growth rates and we undervalue
durability because uh growth is
something you can measure in the here
and now and you can always track that
very precisely um the question of
whether a company's still going to be
around a decade from now that's actually
what what dominates the value equation
and that sort of is a much more uh
qualitative sort of a thing and so if if
we um if we went back to this idea of
these characteristics of Monopoly uh
proprietary technology Network effects
economies of scale um um you can think
of these these characteristics as ones
that exist at a moment in time where you
capture a market and take it over but
you also want to think about are these
things going to last over time and so
there's a Time Dimension to all these
characteristics so Network effects often
have a great time element where as the
network scales the network effects
actually get more robust and so if you
have a network effect business that's
often one that uh um can become a um a
bigger and stronger Monopoly over time a
proprietary technology is always a
little bit of a tricky one so you want
something that's an order of magnitude
better than uh the state-of-the-art in
the world today and that's how you get
people's attention that's how you
initially break through but then um you
don't want to be superseded by somebody
else and so there are all these areas of
innovation where there was tremendous
Innovation but no one made any money so
uh you know dis Drive Manufacturing in
the 1980s um you could you could do a
better dis build a better dis Drive than
anybody else you could take over the
whole world and two years later someone
else would come along and replace yours
and in the course of 15 years you got
vastly improved disc drives so it had
great benefit to Consumers but um it
didn't actually help the people who
started these compan compies and so
there's always this question about
having a huge breakthrough in technology
but then also being able to say explain
why uh yours will be the last
breakthrough uh or at least the last
breakthrough for a long time or will you
make a breakthrough and then you can
keep improving on it at a quick enough
Pace that no one can ever catch up so if
you have a structure of um a structure
of the future where there's a lot of
innovation and other people will come up
with new things in the thing you're
working on um that's great for society
it's um it's actually not that good for
your business typically um and then um
economies of scale uh where I talked
about so so I think anyway so I think
this last mover thing is is very
critical I'm always tempted you know I
don't want to overdo the chess analogies
but you know the first mover in chess is
someone who plays white white is about a
one-third of a pawn Advantage so there's
a small advantage to uh going first you
want to be the last mover um who who
wins the game and so so was the Kappa
Blanca uh world champion uh uh chess
champion Kappa Blanca line you must
begin by studying the end game and and I
do think that's um well I wouldn't say
that's the only thing you should study I
think this uh the sort of perspective of
asking these questions why will this
still be the leading company 10 15 20
years from now is a uh is a really
critical one to to try to think
through let me um let me sort of uh I
want to sort of go in two slightly other
directions with this Monopoly versus
competition idea and I think um so I
think this is the the central idea uh in
my mind for for business for starting
business for thinking about them and U
and there are some some very um
interesting perspectives I think it
gives on the whole you know on the whole
history of innovation and technology and
science because um you know we we've
lived through um we've lived through um
you know 250 300 years of incredible
technological progress in you know many
many different domains uh you know steam
engine to Railways
to telephones Refrigeration household
appliances um you know the computer
Revolution Aviation all sorts of
different areas of technological
innovation and then there's sort of
analogous thing that one can say about
science where uh we've lived through
centuries of of enormous amounts of
innovation in in in science as well and
um and the the thing that I think um
people always miss when they think about
these things is um is that um because X
and Y are independent variables um some
of these things can be extremely
valuable Innovations but uh the people
who invent them who come up with them do
not get rewarded for this and uh and
certainly if you go back to um you need
to create X dollars in value you capture
y% of X I would suggest that the history
of science has generally been one where
y 0% across the board the scientists
never make any money um they're always
duded into thinking that they live in a
just universe that will reward them for
their work and for their inventions and
this is probably the fundamental
delusion that uh that scientists tend to
suffer from in our in our society um and
and even in technology there are sort of
many different areas of Technology where
um where there were great innovations
that created tremendous value for
society but uh but people did not uh did
not actually capture uh that much of the
of the value and so I think there is
this sort of whole uh history of um
science and technology that can be told
from the perspective of how much value
was actually captured and um and
certainly there are entire sectors where
people didn't capture anything so you
you're the smartest physicist of the
20th century you come up with special
relativity you come up with general
relativity you don't get to be a
billionaire you don't even get to be a
millionaire um it just it just somehow
doesn't work that way um the railroads
incredibly valuable most of them just
went bankrupt because it was too much
competition um right Brothers um you fly
the first plane you don't make any money
and so I think there is sort of the
structure to these industries that's uh
that's very important um and I think the
uh the thing that's actually rare are
the success cases most the so it's
actually you really think about the
history in this in this 250 years sweep
um it's unus Y is almost always 0% it's
always zero in science it's almost
always in in technology and so it's very
rare where people made money you know
the early uh the late uh 18th early 19th
century the first Industrial Revolution
was the textile mills you had the steam
engine you sort of automated things and
you had these Relentless improvements
that people improved efficiency of
textile factories of manufacturing
generally at a clip of 5 to 7% every
year year after year decade after decade
you had 60 70 years of tremendous
improvement from 1780 to
1850 um but even in 1850 most of the
wealth in Britain was still held by the
landed aristocracy uh the workers didn't
you know the workers didn't make that
much the capitalists didn't make that
much either it was all competed away
there were hundreds of people running
textile factories it was an industry
that just uh um the structure of the
competition prevented people uh from
from making any money um and so I I
think there are in my mind there
probably are only two broad categories
in the entire history of the last 250
years where people have actually uh come
up with new things and made money doing
so um one is uh these sort of vertically
integrated complex monopolies which
people uh did build in the Second
Industrial Revolution at the end of the
19th and start of the 20th century and
so this was like Ford it was the
vertically integrated oil companies like
Standard Oil um and what these
vertically integrated monopolies uh
typically required was this very complex
coordination you got a lot of pieces to
fit together in just the right way uh
when you assembled it you had a
tremendous Advantage this is actually uh
done surprisingly little today and so I
think this is sort of a business form
that um when people can pull it off is
very valuable it's typically fairly
Capital intensive uh we live sort of in
a in a in a culture where it's very hard
to get people to buy into anything
that's super complicated and takes very
long to build uh but I you know when I
sort of think about my colleague Elon
Musk from PayPal success with Tesla and
SpaceX uh I think the key to these
companies was the complex vertically
integrated Monopoly structure they had
so if you sort of look at Tesla or
SpaceX if you ask you know was there
sort of a single breakthrough I mean
they certainly innovated on a LW of
Dimensions I don't think there was a
single 10x breakthrough in battery
storage or you know
maybe working on some things on rocketry
but they hadn't there was no sort of
single massive breakthrough but what was
really impressive was integrating all
these pieces together and um and doing
it in a way that was more vertically
integrated than most of their
competitors so Tesla you also integrated
The Car Distributors so they wouldn't uh
steal all the money as has happened with
the rest of the car industry in the US
or SpaceX um you basically uh pulled in
all the
subcontractors um uh where most of the
large uh Aerospace companies have single
Source subcontractors that are able to
sort of charge Monopoly profits and make
it very hard for the integrated
aerospace companies to make money um and
so uh vertical integration I think is
sort of a a very underexplored modality
of of technological progress that people
uh would uh would do well to look at
more and then I think there is there is
something about software itself that's
very very powerful um software has these
incredible economies of scale these low
margin costs and there is something
about the world of bits as opposed to
the world of atoms where you can often
get very fast adoption and and the fast
adoption is critical to capturing and
taking over markets because even if you
have a small Market if the adoption rate
is too slow there'll be enough time for
other people to enter that market and
compete with you whereas if you have a
small to midsized Market and have a fast
adoption rate you can uh take over this
market and so and so I think this is one
of the reasons Silicon Valley has done
so well and why software has been of
this phenomenal industry and what I what
I would suggest what I would want to
leave you with is there are sort of
these different rationalizations people
give for why certain things work and why
certain things don't work and I think
these rationalizations always obscure
this question of um creating X Dollar in
value and capturing y% of X so the
science rationalization we're always
told is that the scientists aren't
interested in making money they're doing
it for charitable reasons and that not a
good scientist if you're motivated by
money and I'm not even saying people
should always be motivated by money or
something like this but I I think we
should we should be a little bit more
critical of this as a rationalization we
should ask is this a rationalization um
uh to obscure the fact that y equals 0%
and the scientists are operating in this
uh in this sort of world where all the
uh all the Innovation is effectively
competed away and they can't capture any
of it directly and then the uh the
software Distortion that often happens
is because people are making such vast
Fortunes in software we infer that this
is the most valuable thing um in the
world being done full stop and so if
people at Twitter make uh billions of
dollars it must be that Twitter is worth
far more than anything Einstein did um
and um and uh and what that sort of
rationalization tends to obscure is
again that X and Y are independent
variables and there are these businesses
where you capture a lot of X and there
are others where you don't and so uh and
so I do think um I do think the history
of innovation has been this uh this
history where uh the the the the
microeconomics the structure of these
industries has mattered a tremendous
amount and when um and um and and and
there is sort of this the story where
some people have made vast fortunes
because they were in Industries with the
right structure and other people uh made
uh nothing at all because um because
they were in these sort of very
competitive things and we shouldn't just
rationalize that way I think it's worth
understanding this better and then
finally let me come back to this this uh
this sort of overarching theme for this
talk this competition is for losers idea
which um is always this provocative way
to to title things because we always
think of the losers as the people who
are not good at competing we think of
the losers as the people who are um slow
on the sports on the track team in high
school or who do a little bit less well
on the standardized tests um and don't
get into the right schools and so we
always think of losers as people who
can't compete um and I want us to really
rethink and and revalue this and
consider whether it's possible that
competition itself um is off that we we
we're sort of it's not just the case
that we don't understand this Monopoly
competition dichotomy intellectually so
sort of been talking about why why you
wouldn't understand it intellectually
because um people lie about it it's
distorted we have all these uh the
history of innovation rationalizes what
happen in all these very very strange
ways but I think it's more than just an
intellectual blind spot I think it's
also a psychological blind spot where we
find ourselves you know very very
attracted to competition in in one form
or another um we find it reassuring if
other people do things the word ape
already in the time of Shakespeare meant
both primate and imitate uh and there is
something about human nature that's
deeply mimetic imitative apik sheeplike
leming like cd-like um and it's this
very very problem
uh thing that we need to always think
through and try to overcome and and
there is always this question about um
competition um as as a form of
validation where we we go for things
that lots of other people are going for
and um it's not that there is wisdom in
crowds it's not when lots of people are
trying to do something that that's proof
of uh it being valuable I think it's
when lots of people are trying to do
something that is often um that is often
proof of insanity there 20,000 people a
year who move to Los Angeles to become
movie stars about 20 of them make it um
I think the Olympics are a little bit
better because you have a you know um
you can sort of figure out pretty
quickly whether you're good or not so
it's there's a little bit less of a dead
weight loss to society um you know um um
you know your your the sort of
educational experience at a place uh the
the the pre- Stanford educational
experience um there's always sort of a
non-competitive characterization I think
most of the people in this room had
machine guns they were competing with
people with bows and arrows so um it
wasn't exactly a parallel competition
when you were in junior high school and
high school um there's always a question
does the tournament make sense as you
keep going and this is uh and so um
there is always this question if people
go on to grad school or post
post-doctoral educations does the
intensity of the competition really
makes sense there's the uh the you know
classic uh Henry Kissinger line that uh
um describing his fellow faculty at
Harvard that the uh um the battles were
so ferocious because the stakes were so
small describing sort of Academia and um
and and you sort of think on one level
this is a description of insanity you
know why would people fight like crazy
when the stakes are so small but it's
also I think simply a function of the
logic of the situation when it's imp
really hard to differentiate yourself
from other people when the differences
are when the objective differences
really are small then uh you have to uh
compete ferociously to maintain uh a
difference of one sort uh or another um
that's often more imaginary than real
there's always sort of a personal uh
version of this that I I tell where um
you know I was sort of hyper hypert
tracked I you know my e8th grade Junior
High School yearbook one of my friends
wrote in you know I know you'll get into
Stanford in four years as a sophomore I
sort of went into went to Stanford four
years later uh at the end of High School
uh went to Stanford Law School uh you
know ended up um at a big law firm in uh
New York uh where from the outside
everybody wanted to get in on the inside
everybody wanted to leave um and and you
had um and it was this very strange
Dynamic where after I uh sort of
realized this was maybe not the best
idea um and left after seven months and
3 days you know one of the people down
the hall from me uh told me um it's
really reassuring to see you leave Peter
I had no idea that it was possible to
escape from alcatra which of course all
you had to do was go out the front door
and not come back but um but so much of
people's identities got wrapped up in um
in winning uh these competitions that uh
they somehow lost sight of what was
important what was valuable uh you know
competition does make you better at
whatever it is that you're competing on
because when you're competing you're um
comparing yourself with the people
around you you're figuring out how do I
beat the people next to me how do I do
somewhat better at whatever it is
they're doing and you will get better at
that thing I'm not I'm not questioning
that I'm not denying that but um but it
often comes at this tremendous price
that uh you stop asking some bigger
questions about what's truly important
and truly Valu
and so I would I would say that don't
always go through the tiny little door
that everyone's trying to rush through
maybe go around the corner and go
through the vast gate that no one's
taking thank you very
much I guess we time for you want to
take a few questions
or
sorry oh yeah people want to take I'll
take a few questions we have a few
minutes time yeah go ahead um since yeah
as you mentioned earlier often
monopolies and competition often look
similar because the narratives people
tell the narratives we tell
ourselves do you have any ways to easily
determine the difference when you're
looking at an idea or evaluating your
own idea well I'd say the question I'm I
always try to focus on is what is the
actual market so not what's The
Narrative of the market because you can
always tell a fictional story about a
market that's much bigger or much
smaller but what is the what is the real
objective market so it's always yeah you
always try to figure it out and you
realize people have incentive to distort
things yeah so which of the aspects of
monop that you mentioned would you say s
like
Google um well they have uh they have
Network effects with the the ad Network
they had proprietary technology that
gave them the initial lead because they
had the the page rank algorithm which
was uh sort of an order of magnitude
better than any other search search
engine you have economies of scale uh
because of the need to store you know
all these different uh sites and at this
point you have brand so Google has all
four maybe maybe the proprietary
technology is somewhat weaker at this
point but definitely it had all four and
maybe three and a half out of four now
yeah how does this apply to paler and
second what's you like second is what
what with the iPhone uh head oh this is
that's that's a that's a there sort of a
set of companies that are doing
different copycat payment systems on on
mobile phones there's square there's
PayPal sort of they have just they just
have sort of different shapes that's how
they differentiate themselves one is a
triangle one is a square um and so you
know um maybe at some point the Apes
will run out of shapes or something like
that but um but I think um no palent
here we we started with a focus on on um
the um intelligence Community which is
small submarket um you had a proprietary
technology that used a very very
different approach um uh where it was
focused on the human um computer uh
synthesis rather than the uh uh sub
substitution which I think is the
dominant Paradigm so there's a whole set
of things I would say on the on the
market approach and the the proprietary
technology uh yes um we have design
thinking methodology and uh lean uh
startup thinking um which is used to
mitigate Risk by not creating things
that people don't want but how do young
innovators uh have inspiration to create
complex systems that last through time
can you repeat the question yeah so the
question is um what do I think about
lean startups uh um iterative thinking
where you get uh feedback from people uh
versus uh complexity that may not work
so I I am personally quite skeptical of
all the uh Lean Startup methodology I
think the the the really great companies
um did something was sort of somewhat
more of a Quantum Improvement that
really differentiated them from
everybody else um they they typically
did not do massive you know customer
surveys the people who ran these
companies uh sometimes not always
suffered from mild forms of Asbergers so
they we not actually that influenced not
that easily deterred by what other
people thought or told them to do um so
I I do think we're we're way too focused
on um iteration as a modality and not
enough on trying to um have um you know
um a virtual ESP link with the public
and figuring it out ourselves um I I
would say that uh let me see um I would
say that uh the um I I'm not quite the
risk question I think is always a very
tricky one because there are um
you know there there it's it's not it's
often I think it's often the case that
you don't have enough time to really
mitigate risks if you if you're going to
take enough time to figure out what
people want um you often will have
missed the boat by then um and um and
then of course there's always the risk
of of doing something that's uh that's
not that uh significant or meaningful so
you know you you could say a track in um
in law school is a lowrisk track from
one perspective it may still be a very
highrisk track in the sense that maybe
you not um have a high risk of not doing
something meaningful with your life so
we have to think about risk in these uh
in these very complicated way I think
risk is sort of this very uh complicated
concept yes you talking about the last
move Advantage but then doesn't that
imply that there's already competition
to begin with chest piece on the chest
board um yeah so there's always this uh
terminology thing so I I would say that
uh there are uh there are categories in
which people sort of are bundled
together I would say the Monopoly
businesses were in in effect they they
really were a big first mover in some
sense you could say you could say Google
was not the first search engine there
were other search engines before but on
one dimension they were dramatically
better than everybody else so they were
the first one with page rank with with
sort of a automated approach um Facebook
was not the first uh social networking
site my friend Reed Hoffman started one
in 1997 they called it social net so
they already had the name social
networking uh in the name of their
company seven years before Facebook uh
their idea was that it was going to be
this virtual cyers space where I'd be a
dog and you'd be a cat and we'd have all
these different rules about how we'd
interact with each other in this virtual
alternate reality Facebook was the first
one to get real identity so it was so
I'd say I hope Facebook will be the last
social networking site it was the first
one in a very important Dimension people
often would not think of it as the first
because they'd sort of lump all these
things together I have one more question
okay one more question let's take one
here uh if theoretically someone who uh
worked at Goldman Sachs out of college
and left out 6 months and is now
studying computer science at Stanford uh
how would you recommend
rethinking
that um you know I don't I don't have a
I don't have a great um I'm not great at
the Psychotherapy stuff so I don't I
don't quite know how to I don't quite
know how to uh how to solve this that
there are these um you know there are
these very odd stud they've done on
people who go to um business school
there one they've done at Harvard
Business School where um it's sort of
the anti- asberg um personality where
you have people who are super
extroverted uh generally have low
convictions uh few ideas and you have
sort of a hot house environment you put
all these people in for two years and at
the end of it uh they systematically end
up the largest cohort systematically
ends up doing the wrong thing they try
to catch the last wave you know uh 1989
everyone at Harvard tried to work for
Mike milin it was one or two years
before he went to jail for all the junk
bond stuff they were never interested in
Silicon Valley OR tech except for 99
2000 when they timed the bubble peing
perfectly um they did uh and then you
know 05 to7 was housing uh private
Equity stuff like this so so I do think
um I do think this uh tendency for us to
see competition as validation is um is
very deep um I don't think there's some
any sort of easy psychological formula
to uh to avoid it so I don't I I don't
quite know how to uh what sort of
therapy to to recommend but um but my my
my first my first starting point which
is only like it's maybe 10% of the way
is to never underestimate how big a
problem it is we always think this is
something that afflicts other people so
it's easy for me to point to people in
Business Schools or people at Harvard or
people on Wall Street I think it
actually does afflict all of us to a
very profound degree we always think of
advertising is things that work on other
people how who are all these stupid
people who fall for All Those ads on TV
they obviously work to some extent and
they work uh to a disturbing extent on
all of us and it's something we we all
should work to
overcome thank you very much
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