How To Compete With Amazon and Google

Episode Summary

Founders often psych themselves out worrying about competitors, especially big companies. But competitors are likely struggling too. Success isn't zero-sum. There can be multiple winners in a market. Founders shouldn't assume competitors know something they don't. Competitors' marketing is carefully crafted to seem like they're doing great, even if the reality is very different. Founders are intimately aware of their own struggles but see competitors' exterior image. Land grab situations are overhyped. Focus on your own growth metrics, not competitors' fundraising or press. If customers aren't talking about competitors or choosing them over you, you're probably fine. Saying you have no competitors is a red flag. Understand what solutions customers currently use and why yours is better. But sometimes a competitor really does have better product-market fit. Pay attention if competitors take your own users. Structural advantages like distribution can trump product quality. But big companies often fail to build great products despite their structural edge. So build the best product you can. Great products can still win against platforms wanting to compete directly. Competitive intelligence is useful, but don't let it deflate you. Building a better product for your users is hard yet extremely powerful. Focus energy on that, not land grabs or press.

Episode Show Notes

Step inside the Group Partner Lounge to hear Y Combinator Group Partners Harj Taggar, Michael Seibel and Brad Flora discuss the traps founders often fall into when looking at the competition. They identify the particular types of companies you should watch out for and many more you are wasting your time worrying about.  

Apply to Y Combinator: https://www.ycombinator.com/apply/

Episode Transcript

SPEAKER_01: Like how the hell does anyone compete with like one of the greatest companies of all time on the thing that they're experts at, right? And it turned out that just like picking the right avocado was too big of a challenge for like this trillion dollar company. SPEAKER_00: Hello, this is Michael with Harge and Brad and welcome to the Partner Lounge. SPEAKER_01: Hey, so as YC partners, we work with hundreds of startups and we find ourselves repeating the same advice. It often seems pretty obvious over and over again. And we found ourselves wondering why. SPEAKER_02: Before COVID, we'd often gather together in the Partner Lounge at the YC office to try to figure out why this was the case and how we could help startups figure it out faster. SPEAKER_00: And today we're going to talk about competitors. Harge, you want to set this one up? SPEAKER_01: Yes, you know, one thing I've noticed is that I'll do office hours with a company that's doing great and they'll be sort of psych themselves out because they'll just want to talk about how worried they are about a competitor. And it will be, you know, a big company, another startup. And they just like it's like they've lost their excitement for their company and replaced it with fear. And we end up talking about this a bunch, right? Like what's going on? Like why is this company that's doing well? Suddenly you feel like they're failing. SPEAKER_00: Well, it's because their competitor raised five million dollars Harge and we all know whichever company raises five million dollars first wins, right? Isn't that how this works? What do you think, Brad? What lies do you think or how do you think folks are psyching themselves out? Like. Well, I think when you start working on something, you think you're the only one that's had this idea. SPEAKER_02: You quickly learn that's not the case. And then it can be very easy to start thinking that you have to compete with this company and have to beat them in order to succeed with your own company. And so you start thinking of things like they're going to steal my customers. I have to steal their customers. I their product roadmap, it must be amazing. So I should copy whatever they do without really thinking about it too much. And it's just a very dangerous mindset that can take you away from thinking about your own customers and having like a first principles approach to building your company. But there's so many lies that founders tell themselves about about competition and about what their competitors are up to. SPEAKER_00: When I think about a YC company and competing with folks, oftentimes it goes to my head. And the first thing I tell them is like the depressing fact that most likely everyone's going to die. So like you're not accounting for like the most common outcomes like you and your competitors. None of you will make something that people want. And then the second thing they don't count for is that there are lots of businesses where there are multiple winners. How many banks are there? Like one bank doesn't look at the other banks and say, well, I guess that's it. We got a fold up shop. There's already a bank in existence. And so I often think when I'm encountering this fear thing, I like to kind of run with the fear and like be like, let's fear this out to the end point to see what you're really afraid of. And like maybe when we open the closet, the thing in the you know, the boogeyman isn't actually there as opposed to like we're sitting on the bed and just obsessing over all these like things that could go wrong. SPEAKER_02: Yeah, the boogeyman is not there. In fact, I think oftentimes your competitors are just as, you know, messed up as you are. They you read the read about the fundraising and tech crunch or whatever. And and then years later, you talk to someone that worked at that company and they say, oh, man, what a mess. Like the everyone was leaving then the CEO was on a bender and was was all sad because we lost all of our big customers. You just don't know. And it's so easy to assume that if you're having a hard time, everybody else must be having a great time when everyone is having a hard time. SPEAKER_01: Yeah, I think that's a really important point. So, you know, one of the things I remember surprised me the most about when I switched from being a startup founder to a YC partner is that running a startup, you're exposed every day to how screwed your company is. Like you're just hit in the face with it every day. Right. And so you constantly feel like you're failing. You're not like you don't know how to build product. You don't know how to manage people, all of this stuff. And like you see everyone else's exterior and it seems like they're doing great. Right. I remember the earlier YC, I always just felt like everyone else was just crushing it. And I'm like, man, we suck. And so it's not even the exterior, Harj. SPEAKER_02: It's their marketing. Right. You're seeing their carefully crafted marketing. SPEAKER_01: But then as a partner, you work with these companies and you start realizing that like all of them are like kind of really badly flawed somehow. Right. Like literally in any YC batch, I could take every single company and like pick out some like fatal flaw. And like, you know that some of them are going to turn out to be worth like billions of dollars, but you can still do it. But like you don't get that perspective when you're running your own company. SPEAKER_00: But wait a second, Harj. Wait a second. So maybe I shouldn't be worried about my competitor, but this is different situation. We're in a land grab situation. Like I if I don't get those customers unprofitably as fast as possible, my competitors will and then they'll beat me. We hear this shit all like how often do we hear land grab situation at YC? SPEAKER_01: Yeah, it's definitely a bit of a meme. I mean, it's there's truth to it, actually. Right. I don't think it's not unfair to say that you want to get more customers than your competitors. I think it's like what we see is that founders are really quick to assume that their competitors are going to win. And like Brad said, they look at the external signs. It's like, oh, like, you know, they just announced a fundraising round. Oh, they just got like an article in the press like, oh, they just like hired someone from Google. Like all these reasons. But what I try to do in the office hours, I'll be like, hey, like, well, like, are your customers talking about them? Are you losing deals? Like, have you looked at the product you like, you know, compare? How do you rank up? And it's funny, like, I don't know about how do you guys find founders often answer those questions? SPEAKER_02: I mean, usually things are fine, right? The customers are usually not talking about the other the other companies. It's like a confusion of interfaces that the founders thinking, oh, my gosh, my competitors in the New York Times. Therefore, my customers are having a worse experience with my product today. It makes no sense whatsoever. And as soon as we ask those questions, you know, hopefully we can get it through to them that that's that's not what they should be worried about. SPEAKER_00: You know, it was funny because I was thinking about this in the context of my competitors must know something that I don't. So I have to like copy their stuff. I remember back in the day, early in Twitch, back when we were just in TV, we were competing against this company named Ustream and another company named Livestream. And inherently, I knew that we were copying each other's features. Like I knew we were all looking at each other's websites. But there was this one moment where we built a feature that was exclusively for copyright owners taking content off of our site. Like, and it was something you could see on the main site. It wasn't obvious. It had no clear user value at all. And two weeks after we released it, a competitor released the same one. And we were like, oh, crap. Like, this is clearly the blind meeting, the glide. Like, they don't even know why we have this. Like, we wish we didn't have this feature. But like, they built it anyway. SPEAKER_02: But then after that, you shut down the next day, right? Because it was a horrible disaster. That was it. That was the end of the company, right? The company only started working when Emmet and Kevin started actually talking to the users and figuring out what they wanted. SPEAKER_00: Instead of, you know, the years where all of us just looked at each other, all the competitors just looked at each other, copying each other's dumb features. I feel like that's what I'm trying to do in these office hours mostly is like, founders come in and super focused on negativity or other competitor. SPEAKER_01: And I'm basically just trying to get back to basic. What's your growth rate? Customers churning? Like, what's the pipeline on sales look like? And if they can answer all those questions well, you're like, well, then, like, let's get back to it. Like, keep going. Why are we stopping? SPEAKER_02: Spend time on the things that you have control over, not the stuff that you don't. SPEAKER_00: But OK. But let's be clear. Sometimes when we talk to founders, there are some reasonable competitive concerns, right? And I'll start this one out. And Brad, this was an idea you had before. Like, when we when we ask like, so who's competing with you? And then the answer is like, well, we don't have any competitors. Like, there's no other way to solve this problem other than us. Yeah, that's a red flag, right? Yes. That's when we hear that in a YC interview, we buckle up. SPEAKER_02: Yeah, because it just shows it shows kind of a lack of understanding of the customer and what the customer is doing right now to solve the problem. It's very unlikely that no one the customer has never tried another solution to whatever the problem is that they're trying to figure out. And you should know what those are. SPEAKER_01: Yeah. And then Harj, you were talking about like, sometimes your competitor objectively has a better product. SPEAKER_00: Like, I've encountered this. Like, I remember the day after Socialcam sold, one of my close friends, you all know who they are, messaged me and said, OK, I can delete your app now because I've been using something else for this whole time to take video. I was like, oh, I guess we didn't have the best. Like, even my really close friend was only using the products like to, you know, make me feel good because there was a better product out there that he was actually using. What about structural advantages, though? Right. Like, I remember when, you know, my former co-founders, Justin and Emmet, they created a calendar company before they're kind of SPEAKER_00: success later and they literally six months into their company, Google Calendar came out and just absolutely crushed them. SPEAKER_00: So like, what happens when someone has like an actual product structural advantage? SPEAKER_02: Yeah, that oftentimes you should worry about that. With my company, Perfect Audience, we started off using the Facebook Exchange API. And so we had ostensibly eight or nine competitors and we didn't we tried not to worry about them too much. We worried about them too much. And we were all using the same Facebook API to sell ads. When Facebook announced that they were going to launch custom audiences and sell this themselves directly, Facebook was now a competitor and they own the platform. They wrote all the code, they control pricing. So that's a time when you should worry about competition. And so we sold the company. SPEAKER_01: Yeah, I think a good recent example of this too is probably Microsoft Teams and Slack. And again, this is I'm talking about this as an observer of it. But Slack's a pretty great product. We all use it every day. And I haven't used Microsoft Teams, but I guess that it's not as good of a product as Slack. But good enough that Microsoft could actually use that like massive sales distribution advantage to kind of beat them in the enterprise. Right. Right. What do you guys think about that? SPEAKER_00: If you have a structural advantage, but you bring a crap product to the game, you'll lose. Right. And like, you know, we saw that Microsoft's done that too. Right. Their music player, remember, back in the day, their mobile operating system back in the day. So a structural advantage with the crap product doesn't win. A structural advantage with a product that's good enough can win. And man, it really helps when some startup specs the whole product for you. Right. Like Microsoft's move is to not innovate the good enough product. It's to copy it maybe five to 10 years later. And so that is something to be worried about. But weirdly, just as often, they don't nail it. Like just as often, they just don't nail it. And like you see this with Facebook, right? I would say more often, right? SPEAKER_01: Because if you think about like we're like scratching our heads trying to find examples of times that like a fang company launched a product that killed a fast growing successful startup. So like, like clearly more often not like structural advantage isn't actually that much of an advantage. SPEAKER_02: I mean, Snap, Snap lives. Right. Just the just the fact that it lives. Right. You know, tis but a scratch. Right. Facebook keeps hacking away at it and it's still alive. It's still a going concern. And I think for a lot of founders where structural advantage is something that comes later, they're just trying to build a great product. The takeaway is that just build a better product. And if you do that, then all of these other advantages are just kind of moot points because it's really rare for the company that has the structural advantage to also put out a great product. But why would they? It doesn't make any sense. It's not the ideal allocation of resources to make it great when you don't have to. So there's always an open door. SPEAKER_01: Another good reason why I see example is Instacart. Like Instacart from like day one, like the number one thing was Amazon's going to do this. Amazon's going to do this. Like how the hell does anyone compete with like one of the greatest companies of all time, like on the thing that they're experts at? Right. Like and it turned out that just like picking the right avocado was too big of a challenge for like this trillion dollar company. Like man, like can you imagine how many times our people with Instacart must have just been like had to sit there and listen to some investor, explain to them why like Amazon and Jeff Bezos was going to crush the company? SPEAKER_00: Well, think about Kyle and Cruz. When Cruz started, Google was already a decade into building self-driving cars. Right. Like it was so funny because I remember talking to an investor about this and that was their whole point. They were like, Kyle screwed from day one. And I just was like, look, like Kyle has built the most complicated products inside of our company. Whenever there was ridiculously stupid technical challenge that no one else could do, Kyle volunteered for it. I would never bet against Kyle. Like and the crazier, the more I wouldn't bet against him. And you know, that investor was like, you're right, Michael. And that person made a lot of money. Oftentimes we have to give this somewhat depressing advice to founders, which is basically like this is a hard problem, but not a complicated product. You need a better product. It's really hard to build a better product. But it turns out you get such an advantage by delivering more value to your end users than everyone else does. It's the club you can bludgeon everyone else with. So like instead of worrying about all these stupid things like land grabs and whatever, all the other crap. It's like, yeah, just build a better product for your users. And you might get surprised at how well that strategy goes. SPEAKER_01: Stay informed, like know what your competitors are building and how you stack up against them. But don't let it deflate you.