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Be The First Mover

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Recently I wrote a post titled Competition where I listed out a set of topics that summarizes my philosophy around competition. I’m involved in a lot of companies, many of which are either the market leader in their segment, fighting head to head with a few other companies for clear market leadership, going after an existing incumbent, or creating a new segment entirely. As a result I spend a lot of time thinking and talking about competition, as well as executing a variety of strategies to address competitive dynamics.

The first topic I want to address is the idea of being the first mover. Several people challenged this idea in the comments and there are many investors that like to invest in “fast followers” (I’m not one of them.) There’s also a well worn cliche that you can identify early leaders as they are the ones with arrows in their back. While I understand the convention wisdom around this, especially in the context of corporate strategy and general innovation theory, I take a different approach, especially in very fast moving markets like the ones I invest in.

When I talk about first mover, I don’t think of being a broad “market” first mover, but rather a “category” or “segment” first mover. In an article I wrote recently for Reuters titled Note to entrepreneurs: Your idea is not special I made the point that “the products and their subsequent companies became great because of execution.”

“Google? Not the first search engine. Facebook? Not the first social network. Groupon? Not the first deal site. Pandora? Not the first music site. The list goes on. Even when you go back in time to the origins of the software industry: MS-DOS – not the first operating system. Lotus 1-2-3 – not the first spreadsheet.”

So, when I talk about being the first mover, I don’t mean “being the first person to come up with the idea.” Rather, I mean that when you begin executing your business, you need to aggressively be the first mover in the current phase of the innovation cycle. While Facebook wasn’t the first social network in the Web 2.0 era, they out-executed everyone else dramatically, and cemented their first mover advantage when they launched the Facebook platform at their first F8 developers conference in 2007. The iPhone wasn’t the first smartphone, but once it established itself as the first real computer in your pocket with a tightly integrated app economy, there was no looking back until Android started to challenge it.

When I go through our portfolio at Foundry Group, I consider many of the companies we’ve invested in to be first movers in their current segment. Others are fighting with a few other companies to be clear leaders, and, as a result, first mover status is ambiguous. In these situations, I encourage the companies I’m an investor in to Do More Faster, right now. If you are in a fight to be in the pole position, you have a few choices:

  1. Invest targeted resources more aggressively in areas that you think will put you in the lead. Basically, double down on your bets.
  2. Buy one of your competitors or a complimentary company that will leapfrog your business ahead.
  3. Change the game, usually by redefining the segment you are playing in.

If you aren’t the first mover, and one of your competitors is steadily leaving you behind in their dust, changing the game is usually the best approach. My measurement window here is usually six months, not five years. Assuming the markets and products evolve rapidly, you have a lot of chances to change the game early on in your life. That ability changes when you’ve clearly defined your path and competitive universe. But don’t be afraid to weave around as you are looking for the segment where you can become the first mover.

In my little corner of the universe, the ultimate first mover was Steve Prefontaine, one of my heroes. The dude always raced from the front. Early on, his coach and Nike co-founder, the amazing Bill Bowerman, encouraged him to “change the game” by running the 3 mile (5k) instead of the mile. Pre rarely lost (usually only in the mile) and always put in an amazing performance. In the process of running from the front, he demoralized his competitors.

As I said in the intro post, these are my ideas and I’d love to hear different perspectives. Challenge me on anything you disagree with.

August 1st, 2011     Categories: Competition     Tags: , ,
  • http://twitter.com/techtionary CrossTalk

    I have found that you cannot predict the future, nor react to it.  The only way to success is to direct the future to your strategy.  IBM perfected this in the in 70s and still does.  So does Apple and a few others.

  • http://twitter.com/techtionary CrossTalk

    I have found that you cannot predict the future, nor react to it.  The only way to success is to direct the future to your strategy.  IBM perfected this in the in 70s and still does.  So does Apple and a few others.

  • http://twitter.com/techtionary CrossTalk

    I have found that you cannot predict the future, nor react to it.  The only way to success is to direct the future to your strategy.  IBM perfected this in the in 70s and still does.  So does Apple and a few others.

  • http://www.pointsandfigures.com pointsnfigures

    Your point about execution is key.  Recently I have seen a lot of social media deals that try to figure out a way to better utilize all your contacts; 5degrees.us, network better; beyondcredentials.com, interaction; aspaceapart.net .  

    There are certainly other companies out there trying to attack the same problems and space.  Who wins?  

    That’s why your point about execution is perhaps the most critical.  Prefontaine was in great shape.  But so was every other runner.  Mentally he won races by psychologically breaking his opponents.  Eventually just his name could psyche them out before the race (network effects).  

    Another observation, Nike wasn’t the first shoe company.  They exploited an initial specialty niche and then went wide.  Now they are the shoe company. 

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Great point on Nike – it’s a perfect complimentary example.

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Great point on Nike – it’s a perfect complimentary example.

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Great point on Nike – it’s a perfect complimentary example.

  • http://www.pointsandfigures.com pointsnfigures

    Your point about execution is key.  Recently I have seen a lot of social media deals that try to figure out a way to better utilize all your contacts; 5degrees.us, network better; beyondcredentials.com, interaction; aspaceapart.net .  

    There are certainly other companies out there trying to attack the same problems and space.  Who wins?  

    That’s why your point about execution is perhaps the most critical.  Prefontaine was in great shape.  But so was every other runner.  Mentally he won races by psychologically breaking his opponents.  Eventually just his name could psyche them out before the race (network effects).  

    Another observation, Nike wasn’t the first shoe company.  They exploited an initial specialty niche and then went wide.  Now they are the shoe company. 

  • http://www.pointsandfigures.com pointsnfigures

    Your point about execution is key.  Recently I have seen a lot of social media deals that try to figure out a way to better utilize all your contacts; 5degrees.us, network better; beyondcredentials.com, interaction; aspaceapart.net .  

    There are certainly other companies out there trying to attack the same problems and space.  Who wins?  

    That’s why your point about execution is perhaps the most critical.  Prefontaine was in great shape.  But so was every other runner.  Mentally he won races by psychologically breaking his opponents.  Eventually just his name could psyche them out before the race (network effects).  

    Another observation, Nike wasn’t the first shoe company.  They exploited an initial specialty niche and then went wide.  Now they are the shoe company. 

  • http://twitter.com/StoryAmp StoryAmp

    Great food for thought, thanks! Do you have more examples of  #3: “Change the game, usually by redefining the segment you are playing in?” Reminds me of The Innovator’s Dilemma… is that what you mean?

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      I’ll put out some examples in the future.

  • http://blog.tomevslin.com Tom Evslin

    A story re running from the front and execution:

    Way back in high school I was a slow miler. I decided I could win if I dashed out in front at the start of the race and relied on my competitiveness to keep me there. I got to maybe third before the 1st turn by sprinting but then slowed down already winded. The runner behind me ran into me and I fell on the cinders, Subsequent runners from our arch-rivals gave me small pushes as they went by. I finally got up and ran the rest of the race behind the pack.

    When I finished (in six minutes!), the coach said “go down to the infirmary and they’ll take the cinders out with a wire brush.” I didn’t make it to the infirmary and still have cinders in my knees to keep me humble.

    As you said, it’s all in the execution. Ideas and even dreams are cheap.

  • Anonymous

    I don’t subscribe to this first mover concept philosophically. All companies are completely different from one another and because of this each of them is first mover in endless different ways. What does it mean to say (suppose) Nike was the first to market? To offer sports shoes? To offer sports shoes in Alabama? To offer outsourced-manufactured sports shoes in Alabama? To offer outsourced-manufactured and celebrity-endorsed sports shoes in Alabama? Any of these and million other differentiation points (perspectives to strategy) can be important or even decisive and so warrant comparison, but they are all part of one integrated system which can not be compared in any way other than on profit (in the long term).

  • http://kirklove.tumblr.com/ kirklove

    Long time lurker. First time poster. It was the picture of Pre. God damn he could run. Oh yeah, great post btw. ;)

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Thanks! Yeah – Pre was amazing.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=72600771 Kenneth Seville

    Great post Brad. Even better comment by CrossTalk. I was so influenced by his comment that I wrote my own post about it: http://civiside.blogspot.com/2011/08/thoughts-on-be-first-mover.html

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Super – thanks for joining the conversation! I like your post.

  • http://www.kineplay.com/ben Ben Milstead

    In my business (video games), looking for a segment where you can become the first mover is a little analogous to implementing a new or under-adopted game mechanic so well that you become the definition of the category. Others will follow your idea but wish they could follow your execution. Rovio, for example — they weren’t the first mobile 2D physics game, but their product execution was first-rate and their market execution was prescient (continual engagement with players through lots of content updates — few were doing this on mobile at the time — rather than feature updates and new skus). Now they’re scaling and evolving and so far doing a good-to-excellent job of that. IMO all software companies should study the video game industry in preparation for the massive markets that are coming our way over the next decade — at that scale practically everything will become hit-driven and a measurement window of six months may be generous.

  • http://twitter.com/peteskalla Peter Skalla

    Off topic:  

    Speaking of running, can you recommend a good trail run around Boulder?  I’ll be in town a night this week and would love to take in 5 miles.

  • http://termpaperwriter.org/ custom paper

    Amazing stuff,Thanks so much for this!This is very useful post for me. This will absolutely going to help me in my projects .

  • Anonymous

    Brad – this is an area that very few VCs do a good job of describing ( no grades here! ).

    Another way to look at it: there are always numerous entrants in a new segment, but only one will solve the execution riddle ( or the product market fit recipe ) and explode into a perceived / actual leadership position.

    I like to think of it as 5 armies clinmbing an 8 foot wall, while one army unlocks a gate and just runs into the unconquered territory.

    The gate opening combinations for Fb ( campus to campus, social status over personal expression, etc. ) & iPhone ( touchscreen, full browser experience, design, etc ) are not something that research could uncover – no one said they wanted these features, even though they did – it takes insight. Some people find insight the high volume way, they just keep throwing stuff at the wall until the metrics break out. Whatever works….

    Execution is as vague a term as strategy. You are directionally correct here, but not specific enough IMHO. The questions that you leave unanswered are:
    - when do you know you are ‘ left behind in the dust ?
    - what models or precedents might be a basis for or execution model ?
    - how do we know if we should respond to customers or build something they want but will not ask for?

  • Roman Levandovsky

    I think the idiom you were looking for this one is “pioneers take all the arrows”, so is the moral of the story with companies like Apple, Facebook and co, “don’t be a pioneer rather follow pioneers closely and let them take the arrows”, later on negotiate with the natives and build a better settlement?

    I agree 100% with you that ideas in of themselves are necessary though not sufficient precondition for success, execution is the key. In order to execute well, somewhere along the way you need to learn how to do that and that means failing, learning, failing and learning constantly and continuously. As long as you don’t blow your head off when you fail in a controlled manner, great benefits will be achieved and learning accelerated.

  • http://twitter.com/brij Brij Singh

    Great post Brad. 

    Big fan of Pre. Still remember the scene from documentary where he wouldnt even let little kid run ahead of him :)

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  • belikePre

    Do you also recommend the Pre moustache?

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      Not so much.

  • David Sandusky

    reminds of a great and short TED talk about the important first follower. http://www.ted.com/talks/view/lang/eng//id/814

  • David Sandusky

    reminds of a great and short TED talk about the important first follower. http://www.ted.com/talks/view/lang/eng//id/814

  • David Sandusky

    reminds of a great and short TED talk about the important first follower. http://www.ted.com/talks/view/lang/eng//id/814

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_XJRPYSNCPGAQSGOZ2D657IJY5Y Les Bagott

    Netscape was one of the first major internet browsers. Now it no longer exists. The lesson? Being first to the market rarely pays off, especially when consumers aren’t ready to embrace a new product, a new study finds.
    garage

    • http://www.feld.com bfeld

      From my perspective as an early stage investor, Netscape was a very successful company. Even though it doesn’t exist as a standalone product 17 years after being created, it’s legacy lives on in Firefox. And, it had tremendous impact – both technically and financially – one many people, companies, and products.

  • David Putnam

    One other thought on first mover…be the first to disrupt with ree, because being last will create lots of problems for your existing business.

    David Putnam

  • Anonymous

    being from oregon, the photo of pre caught my attention.  excellent post and i completely agree.  i love being in the lead, be it having honors on the tee box or in the startup world.  just want to make sure you’ve read “bowerman and the men of oregon” by kenny moore.

  • Anonymous

    being from oregon, the photo of pre caught my attention.  excellent post
    and i completely agree.  i love being in the lead, be it having honors
    on the tee box or in the startup world.  just want to make sure you’ve
    read “bowerman and the men of oregon” by kenny moore

  • http://equinejointsupplements.blogspot.com Ricardo

    The information is very interesting. I want to thank from the mind. I was really inspired from you.

  • Larry McKeogh

    The distinction between first mover and better executor gets blurred here, IMO.  I agree that by defining your segment narrowly you can be viewed as the first mover.  Doing so also provides a fledgling company with some protection.  The category probably didn’t exist until you defined it.  (Did you know I am the underwater badminton world champion?)  Once defined though, you’ve now got to defend it.  That is where execution comes into play.  That is what I believe Foundry to really be investing in – the team that will be able to defend this category.  (If I told you I was afraid of the water would it change your opinion of my earlier claim?)

    Many of the early stage company’s are taking to heart your third point – Change the game, usually by redefining the segment you are playing in. By doing so, they are able to fly below the incumbent radar until they are better able to stand the competition.  Hopefully by that point they have a good enough grasp of the market to make a race of it.

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