A playbook for Generating Business Ideas
Same Problem, Similar Solution (Differentiate)
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WhereStartupIdeasComeFromAPlaybookforGeneratingBusinessIdeas-1
3. Same Problem, Similar Solution (Differentiate)
“Differentiating” means solving the same problem for the same or a slightly different customer segment as an existing company with traction, except with a slightly different solution. In other words, it means competing with an existing company on a new or different competitive axis. It means providing a certain competitive axis, or product value proposition, better than existing companies. The customers could be the same as those of the existing company, or slightly different. Depending on the product, the customer could use your product in addition to, or instead of, the existing company’s product. Examples of competitive axes which you could compete on, which I’ve included in the following section, are product, privacy, price, and unbundling. I’ve provided examples of companies that have applied this strategy. a. Product/User Experience - iPad Steve Jobs, Founder of Apple, is widely considered one of the best product visionaries of all time. Apple’s iPad was one example of many extremely successful products that Jobs helped pioneer. The “do what’s working” methodology applies to the product development of the iPad. Apple’s iPad is a variation of two existing products that had validated customer demand. The iPad is a handheld portable computer. It is larger than the iPod and iPhone, but smaller than laptops like the Powerbook. Compared to other potential products, the iPad was a lower risk venture because of the validation that the iPod and Powerbook had achieved. The success of the iPod and Powerbook indicated that there was demand for portable computers, both small and large. How to apply product differentiation to your next venture? Analyze one or more successful products within a category. What aspect of the product might customers want to be differentiated? b. Privacy - DuckDuckGo DuckDuckGo is a search engine. They compete almost directly with search engine titans like Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft. DuckDuckGo competes with these highly successful companies on the basis of privacy. Google and others have validated that people see their solution (search engine) as a viable solution to their needs. By providing a very similar solution to the one that Google and others have validated, DuckDuckGo reduced the risk of building something that no one wants. There is a risk that the competitive axis that they compete on, privacy, is not of value to customers. But compared to a product with no previous validation of any kind, that risk is almost certainly lower. Privacy may even be considered a “known need,” as defined in the previous chapter. People have been paying for items that provide privacy, such as clothes and private property, for a very long time. DuckDuckGo is still a young company. However, especially after the recent publicity over the NSA’s spying, people seem to be finding privacy over their personal data more and more valuable. DuckDuckGo is backed by some of the world's most successful venture capital investors. How to apply differentiation on the basis of privacy to your next venture? What other online products put people’s personal data at risk? Could you create a similar product, but compete on the basis of privacy? Perhaps a private social network would be valuable to people. c. Price - Robinhood A third business model aspect that companies can differentiate on is price. In practice, this could mean supplying something with a high price and providing it for less or for free. In order to find the business, the company would have to either find a different way to make money, or raise a bunch of venture capital. Examples of companies that differentiate on price are JetBlue, Ryan Air, Scottrade, and Robinhood. Robinhood is an interesting case so I’ll explain that company in more detail. Robinhood is a commission-free, retail stock brokerage. Customers can use Robinhood to buy and sell stocks and receive the best possible trade execution. Stock brokerage has been supplied to date primarily by big financial institutions, and often at high prices. It was only recently that discount brokers such as E*TRADE and Scottrade entered the market and started supplying brokerage at as low as about $7 per transaction. Many of these financial institutions are very large and profitable. They are some of the biggest companies in the world. Robinhood has replicated the service that these companies provide. They are a “second mover.” More literally, they are a tenth or twentieth mover. Robinhood differentiates their offering through the business model aspect of price. The company provides transactions for free. Robinhood is using venture capital to fund the company. According to Crunchbase, Robinhood is funded by Andreessen Horowitz and a few other of the most respected and successful venture capital firms in the world. According to Robinhood’s website, “Robinhood will offer margin trading as well as API access, which will allow partnered developers to build applications in conjunction with Robinhood. Robinhood will also receive remuneration for providing trade volume in certain markets. In the future, we plan to offer premium services for active investors.” How to apply pricing differentiation to your next venture? Think of a product or service that people pay for. If you provided this product or service for free or extremely cheap, how else could you make money? d. Unbundle It used to be very expensive to package and bring a product to market, so products were bundled. To buy one product or service you usually had to buy it with several others. However, technology has made it more efficient to package and deliver individual products. By unbundling, the offerings can be improved because producers are completely focused on that specific offering. The products may be more specialized, lower in price, or a better value. By supplying a product, service, or value proposition that was previously provided within a bundled offering with validated demand, you reduce the risk of building something no one wants. If the bundled offering has traction, there is some data to support the argument that the product, service, or value proposition has market demand. Instagram unbundled the photo sharing component of Facebook, and was later acquired by Facebook for $1 billion! Online education companies like Udemy and Skillfeed unbundle the learning component of education. Fedora has unbundled the software component of Udemy for instructors. Below are a few examples of other industries that are unbundling or are ripe for unbundling: ● News/media – We used to buy one newspaper and get world, local, sports, etc. Now it’s all from different sources. ● Banking – Entrepreneurs are picking off offerings of large institutions and offering them as network-based business models, or differentiating them in some way. For example, Lending Club for peer-to-peer consumer lending, and Robinhood for stock brokerage (as discussed above). ● Education – Large institutions have been bundling things like physical location, professors, libraries, networking with other students, learning, etc. Each of the many value propositions that college offers could be offered as discrete products or services. In many cases, these value propositions are already being offered in unbundled offerings. How to apply unbundling to your next venture? What products or services do you buy for more than one reason? What products that you use have more than one value proposition or benefit? What product or service could you supply that would cover just one of those value propositions? |
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