Don Dodge

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Why do Fast Followers often beat the First Mover innovators?

Innovation drives our industry, attracts the best talent,  attracts VC money, and wins fame for its leaders. Innovation leaders burst onto the scene, win early market leadership, but sometimes can't sustain the pace. Why do "fast followers" often jump in later and make fortunes? Is management responsible for the success or failure? Or, are these innovation leaders acquired by larger players before they have a chance to evolve into successful stand alone companies?

I have been on the leading edge, sometimes bleeding edge, of technology for most of my career. I have been fortunate to be part of start-up teams that have created "first-of-its-kind" innovations at companies like Forte Software, AltaVista, Napster, Bowstreet Software, and Groove Networks. All of these companies were first in their field, yet few of them realized the financial rewards one would expect. Is it all timing and luck? Not likely.

Before exploring the reasons for success or failure lets review a list of innovation leaders and fast followers.

  • AltaVista -> Google
  • Napster -> iTunes
  • VisiCalc -> Lotus 123 -> Excel
  • Word Perfect -> Word
  • Netscape -> Internet Explorer
  • Apple Newton -> Palm Pilot -> Blackberry
  • IBM PC -> Compaq -> Dell
  • Double Click -> Google Ad Sense
  • Ofoto -> Flickr
  • Compuserve -> AOL -> @Home -> Comcast & Verizon
  • Nintendo –> Xbox
  • Friendster –> Facebook

All of these companies were innovation leaders and market leaders. Yet, they were eclipsed by fast followers, in some cases multiple times, who imitated their innovation. My belief is that the technology was outstanding...the management was not.

Clayton Christensen wrote The Innovators Dilemma which I reviewed in an earlier post. The basic premise of the book is that management optimizes around protecting their existing business and fails to recognize and react to disruptive threats. However, the examples in Christensen's book play out over 10 or 20 years. The above examples played out in 5 or less years. Are the same factors at work here? Lets take a look.

AltaVista was the first search engine and the clear technology leader. The management at DEC didn't understand what they had and didn't invest the necessary resources to make it a business success. Later Compaq and CMGI squandered the search opportunity and tried to imitate Yahoo, Excite, Lycos, and AOL in the consumer portal game. Big mistake. Fault management.

Napster was the first P2P file sharing application to bring together search, FTP, and Instant Messaging. Brilliant technical synergy. There are lots of reasons for failure here, mostly management decisions and unfortunate timing.

VisiCalc was the first spreadsheet, invented by Dan Bricklin and Bob Frankston.  VisiCalc was slow to adopt the DOS platform. Lotus 123 moved ahead on DOS and achieved market leadership, but failed to jump onto the Windows platform fast enough. Excel did make the move and the rest is history.

IBM created the PC revolution and was the early leader. Compaq was a fast follower focusing on "transportable" PCs and won huge market share. Dell came in later and trounced them all with a better business model.

Compuserve was the first dial-up service provider. Together with Prodigy they dominated the market. Later AOL entered the game with superior marketing and original content. AOL absolutely dominated in the 80's and early 90's. Then @Home created the cable Internet market and took the early lead. It wasn't long before Verizon, Comcast, and other cable providers owned the broadband market. AOL never really made the transition from dial-up to broadband.

In nearly every case the early innovators were eclipsed by fast followers. Why did the fast followers take over market share leadership?

  • Better business model (Google, Ad Sense, Dell)
  • Better market position (Word, Excel, Comcast, Verizon)
  • Better timing (iTunes, Flickr)
  • Better platform choices (Blackberry, Word, Excel)
  • Better management (all the fast followers)

It is overly simplistic to pin the success or failure of these innovators on one factor. There were a combination of factors at work. But in most cases the problem was not inferior technology, it was inferior management decisions.

So, were these early innovators led by technical visionaries who were not good managers? Will the imitators  and "fast followers" suffer the same fate and be overtaken by new fast followers?

The list of "fast followers" above are more than just imitators. They have continued to innovate far beyond the original idea or feature set and have maintained market leadership. If you look closely at these companies they have a  mix of technical visionaries and business management leaders. I discussed this with Robert Scoble who pointed out that it takes a different set of skills to start a company than it does to sustain a company. This balance of skills, I think, is the key to sustained market leadership.

Cisco is an example of an early innovator that kept their market leadership position over time. Their technical founders brought in professional managers to take them to the next level.

There is a rare breed of technical visionaries who are also great business leaders. Bill Gates, Gordon Moore, Larry Ellison, and Scott McNealy are examples. They are truly extraordinary and rare. However, I suspect that each of them has a strong business management team behind them. Bill Gates has Steve Ballmer. Larry Ellison had Ray Lane. The early innovators who failed did not have the business leadership necessary to sustain them.

Lessons for entrepreneurs;

  • Never stop innovating
  • Build a well rounded management team early
  • Value sales and marketing talent as much as technical talent
  • React quickly to disruptive technologies or business models
  • Don't be too proud to imitate when it makes sense

Comments

Other Fast Losers

Other big misses I can think of in the UK are.

The Post Office - why didn't they corner email?
ICQ - used the be the most popular online messenger?
Novell Networking - LanManager - lost in history...
Compuserve - Already mentioned, but a huge miss!
IBM OS2 Warp - Tried to beat MS Windows (Still got the original install disk lol)
Microsoft Mobile - Maybe will lose to Apple platforms
MS Search - Currently brings me 1% of my traffic, Google 92%
Ebay - Can't remember their names but there were about 2 others in the running at one time. Not any more.

Administrator at 6/28/2009 3:44 AM

Long list of failures in every industry

There is probably a pretty long list of early innovators that got eclipsed by fast follwers, in every industry, not just technology.

But, the main point of technology is that it is constantly changing...replacing the old. So, the list will continue to grow.
Administrator at 6/28/2009 9:40 AM

Don't forget about the product

Thanks for this article and the good examples.

You are right that followers can beat the first movers for various reasons.  But the of factors omitted the most obvious: the successors delivered better products.  ("Better" doesn't mean "better technology"; it means "fulfills important customer needs better.")

Superior products unseat the leader often.  Inferior products never do (can you think of an example?)

Therefore job #1 for anyone wanting to unseat a leader or preserve a leadership position: remember the fundamentals and build products that satisfy important customer needs better.

For more on this please see "The first rule of product vision":
  http://bit.ly/14ZCeg

Thanks and best regards,
Philip Haine
StealThisIdea.com
@dphaine
Administrator at 6/28/2009 8:50 PM

Nintendo –> Xbox?

Last time anybody checked, Wii outsells Xbox and PS3 by a sizeable margin.
Administrator at 6/28/2009 11:19 PM

Re: Why do Fast Followers often beat the First Mover innovators?

Netscape -> Internet Explorer -> Firefox
Administrator at 6/29/2009 1:40 PM

Biggest Reason Followers Supercede

B/c innovators frequently become so passionately tied to what they've created that they can not react and adapt as quickly as followers.  followers can pick the very best from one or more innovators and look for where they "got it wrong."  followers can focus on building the "right" solution tabula rasa, whereas often, within an existing environment, people get too focused on trying to "fix" their current list of problems and confine themselves within parameters. 
Administrator at 6/30/2009 7:00 AM

 

Don Dodge

Information Worker Productivity

 

I have been in the software business for more than 20 years. I started my software career with Digital Equipment Corp, aka DEC, in the database group. I worked with 5 software start-ups over the next 12 years. Forte Software was the first multiplatform object oriented development environment. AltaVista was the first search...


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