How To Become A Billionaire (Hint: Build a Monopoly) - YouTube

Channel: Business Casual

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Have you ever wanted to have your name in the news and millions in your bank account?
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What about billions?
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What if, for just one thing, the whole world would have to come to you and you alone?
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If you’ve ever dreamt of building the next Google or Facebook, you are in luck, for today
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we will explore the art of building a monopoly.
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People hope for a better future, a future of progress that makes their life easier,
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safer and more rewarding.
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Everyone strives for progress in one way or another:
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a baker strives to bake better bread, an airport strives to get more flights and a horse breeder
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strives to breed faster horses.
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At the heart of all of these ambitions lies the same thing: horizontal progress, taking
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something that exists and making it better.
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How you make it better does not matter because at the end of the day, there will always be
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others who will gladly sell inferior goods at a cheaper price.
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In the same way that the fastest processor will never be the only processor in the world,
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the best lawyer will never be the only one.
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To build a monopoly, then, you need vertical progress, the act of creating something that
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wasn’t there before.
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A monopoly built upon the fastest car will never exist, but a monopoly built upon the
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first flying car may very well become reality.
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Vertical progress, however, is not enough, for if you innovate without capturing some
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of your innovation’s value, you will be eaten alive by the archnemesis of all monopolies:
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competition.
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That is why horizontal progress is so hard to monopolize: you’re effectively trying
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to beat the best players at their own game.
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Have a look at the fate of commercial aviation, arguably one of the greatest inventions of
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the 20th century.
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In 2013 airlines earned just $4.13 per passenger at a time when the average fare was almost
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$760.
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In other words, the airlines earned $13 billion of net income on over $700 billion of revenue.
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Compare this to a modern monopoly like Google, who earned the same amount on only $55 billion
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of revenue and you’ll see why competition is such a thorn in everyone’s sides.
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If you’re wondering whether Google is a monopoly, the real question is what has Google
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monopolized?
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Google owns 89% of the global search engine market and yet by positioning themselves in
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the global advertising business or the global IT business they make themselves out to be
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a small fish in a very large pond.
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Make no mistake, all of their side ventures like Google fiber and their self-driving car
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are just as much a defense mechanism as they are attempts at innovation.
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In the modern information age, it is very hard for a monopoly to survive once it gets
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in the public’s eye.
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After all, bragging about how successfully monopolistic you are is a quick way to get
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audited and broken up.
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Thus, modern monopolies must survive by hiding in plain sight.
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Americans enjoy mythologizing competition as the great driving force behind innovation,
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but historically the greatest innovations have come from the allure of monopoly.
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Without the promise of great wealth no one in their right mind would risk their fortune
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on innovation.
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Note that there is a difference between becoming a monopoly and staying a monopoly.
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In the 1960s, for example, IBM essentially owned the IT business through their mainframe
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computers.
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Then during the 80s when the market shifted to personal computers and hardware became
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less profitable, the power went to Microsoft and their operating systems.
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Then Microsoft lost ground to Google when mobile computing started to take off at the
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end of the past decade.
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History has shown that that if a monopoly does not innovate it will eventually be replaced.
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How fast that happens depends on a lot of factors, the most important of which is government
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support, but regardless of the speed, the process of innovation is inevitable, and eventually
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even the worst monopolies of today will become relics of the past.
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Monopolies have a bad reputation in the US because the country has had to deal with a
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lot of bad ones in the past.
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Historically, the worst ones were those formed around commodity goods, as was the case with
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Standard Oil and American Tobacco, which jacked up prices to unreasonable levels.
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In a static world, that would be the only type of monopoly, but our world is dynamic
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and ever-changing, with opportunities to innovate lurking around every corner.
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To build a modern monopoly you need to seize these opportunities.
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Said another way, what you want to build is a creative monopoly, one that does not overtake
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and strangle an existing market, but rather creates an entirely new one all for itself.
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In essence, you need to solve a problem that a lot of people have.
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The trick here is that these people don’t even know they have a problem.
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After all, the people of the 19th century lived perfectly fine without cars, as did
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you 20 years ago without a smartphone.
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To build a creative monopoly you have to do three things.
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First, get your hands on proprietary technology.
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Innovation is the mother of all creative monopolies, and the harder it is for others to replicate
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your product, the more successful you will be.
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You can try to innovate existing technology, but in general you’ll need to improve something
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by at least an order of magnitude before you can overcome your big established competitors.
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It is hard to build a monopoly this way, but it’s not impossible and some of the biggest
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companies of our time did exactly that.
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Amazon offered more than 10 times as many books as any bookstore in existence.
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Similarly, Apple definitely improved the design of tablets by at least an order of magnitude,
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since they went from being borderline unusable to extremely popular.
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Of course, by far the best way to innovate is to create something entirely new, since
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then you don’t have any competitors to worry about, at least initially.
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Next, you must harness economies of scale.
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A monopoly should only become stronger the larger it gets, otherwise it’ll get destroyed
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by the copycats it will inevitably attract.
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It may seem delusional to think about scaling to the billions while you’re still at the
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drawing board, but if your idea cannot scale it will never become a monopoly.
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Economies of scale are why it’s so hard to monopolize a service:
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after all, even if you’ve got the best doctors in the world, they can only attend to so many
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patients at once.
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Software, on the other hand, lies at the other end of the spectrum and is the quickest road
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to monopoly, since every new copy of your product is only one click away.
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Harnessing economies of scale becomes even more important if your product’s value relies
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on other people using it, also known as the network effect.
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Consider the immense pressure people feel to make a Facebook profile.
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Almost everyone has one and if you do not join you are essentially dooming your social
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life to oblivion.
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But if none of your friends were on Facebook, you wouldn’t be compelled to join at all,
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since what good does it do to join a ghost town?
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The problem with monopolies that rely on the network effect is that it’s very very hard
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to get the ball rolling initially.
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Your network must provide value to its users regardless of its size in order to attract
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its initial userbase.
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Counterintuitively then, the best way to harness the network effect is to start in the smallest
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market you can find.
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After all, Mark Zuckerberg created Facebook for his classmates at Harvard, not for all
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of mankind.
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The final element you need is distribution, collectively made up of advertising, marketing
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and sales.
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Remember all those people whose unwitting problems you have solved?
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Those same people are being bombarded with other solutions to other problems all year
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round.
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You must convince them that they need your solution above all others, and to do that
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you need a distribution strategy.
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People tend to scoff at distribution because it seems superficial and dishonest.
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After all, shouldn’t a superior product be able to stand out on its own?
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In an ideal world, maybe, but in our day and age even just convincing someone to try your
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product is a daunting task.
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Distribution is important because it works.
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You may think that you are an exception, that your tastes are authentic and that only other,
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weaker-minded people can fall prey to advertising, but make no mistake, you are not different.
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People tend to live with a false confidence in the autonomy of their preferences because
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they’ve become very good at resisting obvious sales pitches.
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But the best advertising is hidden in plain sight, and the best salesmen are those whose
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performance is so captivating that you don’t even realize that you’re being sold.
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The true masters of distribution have job titles completely unrelated to what they actually
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do: the people who sell customers are “business
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developers”, the people who sell companies are “investment bankers” and the people
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who sell themselves are “politicians”.
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Persuading other people to buy what you are selling is quintessential and in the end,
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regardless of whether you make money through ad clicks or through government contracts,
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without a distribution strategy your monopoly is doomed to fail.
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The allure of monopoly is hard to resist, for although the opportunities are few, the
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rewards are great and those who succeed become a part of history.
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If you wish to try your hand at this daunting task, I can highly recommend the book “Zero
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to One” by Peter Thiel, the co-founder of PayPal.
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This book is what inspired me to make this video and it is a brilliant work that offers
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dozens of counterintuitive insights that will help you see the world differently.
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You can listen to a free copy of it by signing up for a free 30 day trial at Audible, who’ve
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been kind enough to sponsor this video.
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Visit http://www.audibletrial.com/businesscasual and you’ll be able to choose from over 180,000
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audiobooks, including “Zero to One”.
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I’d also like to thank all of our supporters on Patreon.
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I hope you enjoyed this video, and as always: stay smart.