Dispense with the Chasm?  No way!

Dispense with the Chasm? No way!

Jeff Bussgang , a Co-Founder and General Partner at Flybridge Capital, published a piece for TechCrunch recently that argued -- when it comes to the technology adoption life cycle and the chasm -- it is time for a refresh.?His argument went as follows:

  1. VCs in recent years have drastically underestimated the size of SAMs (Serviceable Addressable Markets) for their start-up investments because they were “trained to think only a portion of the SAM is obtainable within any reasonable window of time because of the chasm.”
  2. The chasm is no longer the barrier it once was because businesses have finally understood that software is eating the world.
  3. As a result, the early majority has joined up with the innovators and early adopters to create an expanded early market.?Effectively, they have defected from the mainstream market to cross the chasm in the other direction, leaving only the late majority and the laggards on the other side.
  4. That is why we now are seeing multiple instances of very large high-growth markets that appear to have no limit to their upside.?There is no chasm to cross until much later in the life cycle, and it isn’t worth much effort to cross it then.

Now, I agree with Jeff that we are seeing remarkable growth in technology adoption at levels that would have astonished investors from prior decades.?In particular, I agree with him when he says:

“The pandemic helped accelerate a global appreciation that digital innovation was no longer a luxury but a necessity. As such, companies could no longer wait around for new innovations to cross the chasm. Instead, everyone had to embrace change or be exposed to an existential competitive disadvantage.”

But this is crossing the chasm!?Pragmatic customers are being forced to adopt because they are under duress.?It is not that they buy into the vision of software eating the world.?It is because their very own lunches are being eaten.?The pandemic created a flotilla of chasm-crossings because it unleashed a very real set of existential threats.

The key here is to understand the difference between two buying decision processes, one governed by visionaries and technology enthusiasts (the early adopters and innovators), the other by pragmatists (the early majority).?The early group make their decisions based on their own analyses.?They do not look to others for corroborative support.?Pragmatists do.?Indeed, word-of-mouth endorsements are by far the most impactful input not only about what to buy and when but also from whom.?They rely on herd dynamics to make their calls.?When enough of the herd have signaled the safe way forward, they move with the herd.?Prior to then, they wait—unless they are put under duress.?The whole crossing-the-chasm playbook is based on targeting a segment of pragmatists under duress, getting them to adopt ahead of the herd, then getting adjacent herds to follow their lead, building more and more momentum until a tipping point is reached.?Then the whole herd stampedes, and that’s when high tech fortunes are made.

As Jeff notes, we are in such an era at present.?Software really is eating the world. ?Cloud computing is now mainstream.?No need for your own data center.?Smart phones are mainstream.?No need to get to a PC.?Apps are mainstream.?No need to train your end users.?APIs are mainstream.?No need to reinvent what someone else already provides.?Software-as-a-service is mainstream.?No need to manage the next release of a mission-critical application.?Pragmatist customers are being offered more and more value at less and less adoption risk.?Moreover, because each of these waves of innovation can build upon the ones that came before, it is much easier for vendors to deliver the one thing pragmatists want to see more than anything else.?That is the whole product—the complete answer to their business problem, with all the pieces already in production, all readily integrated into one solution, all backed by references from people they know and respect.?

Now we are no longer talking about Crossing the Chasm .?Instead, you might want to take a look at the book that followed it: Inside the Tornado .?The tornado represents the influx of demand that happens when the pragmatist herd sees enough of its members piling onto the next big thing that everyone stampedes to get on the bandwagon.?Fear of being too early gets replaced by fear of being left behind.?Every boardroom in America is demanding to hear about what the CEO is doing about their enterprise’s digital transformation.?That’s why Amazon, and Google, and Facebook, as well as Salesforce and Microsoft, can enjoy such extraordinary growth rates even at their amazing scale.?All these companies are core to bringing any such transformation to fruition.?No wonder their bookings are flying off the charts.?

But don’t kid yourself.?They all had their chasms to cross before they could get to this very enviable place.?Amazon was ridiculed for thinking that it could lead the cloud computing market.?Salesforce was ridiculed for thinking any rational customer would put their business data in the cloud.?Both of them had to find their early adopters (the CIA was a key one for AWS, Merrill Lynch for Salesforce).?Both had to find their beachhead markets on the other side of the chasm (independent software developers for AWS, high-tech sales teams for Salesforce).?So don’t mistake the destination for the journey.?Both had to take a lot of heat to get where they are today.

Looking ahead from here, where will the next generation of chasms appear??There is no question that the Everything-as-a-Service (XaaS) movement has raised the bar for anything to qualify as being truly disruptive.?But there are still two fundamental existential challenges that remain at large in the B2B economy:

  1. Modernizing an enterprise’s operating model.?This is a challenge the financial services sector has been addressing for the past decade, and it still has plenty of work to do before it gets to the finish line.?But now it appears that every business will have to modernize its operating model to incorporate a work-from-anywhere future of work scenario.?No one knows how to do this, and so the early market will lead with visionary attempts, and the mainstream market will hedge its bets until it sees which way the wind blows.?Hard to think of a better place for an entrepreneurial start-up to make its mark.
  2. Reengineering an enterprise’s business model.?This is a much bigger hill to climb.?The most dramatic example is healthcare.?It still needs to migrate from fee-for-service to a lives-under-management business model.?Meanwhile, the energy sector needs to reengineer itself around renewable energy, higher education around remote learning, manufacturing around onshoring, retailing around inventory and delivery, and industrial products around transitioning from a licensed product to a subscription service model.?Again, no one knows the best practices for getting any of these things done, so there is a ton of opportunity for software-enabled next-generation approaches.

And that’s why my partners and I at Wildcat Venture Partners are raising a new fund dedicated specifically and exclusively to investing in companies at the point of crossing the chasm.?Far from seeing the chasm as passé, we believe it is the next big thing!

That’s what I think.?What do you think?

Follow Geoff on LinkedIn | Geoffrey Moore Mailing List

__________________________________________________________________________

Geoffrey Moore | Zone to Win | Geoffrey Moore Twitter | Geoffrey Moore YouTube

Hank Barnes

Chief of Research-Tech Buying Behavior, Gartner - Exploring the Challenges and Opportunities Surrounding Tech Buying Decisions

3 年

Agree...but some added complexity in these days....Chasm hopping anyone?

回复

Spot on Geoffrey Moore! The Chasm is still alive and well, even if some factors have dramatically compressed the TALC adoption time horizon. First, cloud platforms (e.g., AWS, Salesforce PaaS) have allowed SaaS cos to focus their resources on building whole product solutions faster and better with reduced adoption risk for pragmatist customers. Witness the success of SaaS cos such as nCino. Secondly, the PLG movement and digital marketing have sped up TALC adoption maturation. Companies such as Slack, HubSpot, Gainsight and Atlassian all bear witness to this. Finally, the COVID-19 pandemic catapulted several categories in their TALC maturation. Web conferencing and LMSs are two great examples. While both categories were post-Chasm in the pre-COVID-19 era, the dramatic level of adoption that occurred in these categories is attributable to the fact that the pragmatists were under incredible pain and needed to adopt a solution. Zoom saw its 2019 revenues of $331M grow to $2.65B in 2021. Similarly, Google Classroom saw one year growth from 40 million to 150 million users. The threat of not being able to conduct business or school were both sufficient motivators to create widespread adoption among pragmatists.

Michael Gagnon

VP Sales Tr3Dent

3 年

Geoffrey… Great perspectives! The Chasm continues to be a force of reckoning for the Industry. Welcome an opportunity to share our thoughts on how MEF Network, Cloud, Security & Automation technical standards uniquely help the industry to simplify crossing the chasm. Thank you.

John Morris

Sales Leadership: Better Business Thru Technology

3 年

The technology adoption curve "just is", along with the chasm, and all the related social processes; it was originally based on the work of Everett Rogers who studied the diffusion of medical knowledge in South America. The fact that technology adoption may be accelerating, and that business models may be evolving faster, does nothing to undermine the value of the underlying model of knowledge diffusion and technology adoption. It's like an old-fashioned tube telescope. You can pull it out to see objects far away. Or you can shorten it up to focus on things closer. Same telescope. Comparably, we can collapse the time-frame wrapping a technology adoption curve. Or notice that some actors are entering at different points on the curve. It's still the same curve and the same social processes. Imagining otherwise means abandoning a powerful way of understanding. Bravo the rebuttal.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Geoffrey Moore的更多文章

  • Managing Change: A Playbook for Mid-Level Managers

    Managing Change: A Playbook for Mid-Level Managers

    By Geoffrey Moore Author – The Infinite Staircase: What the Universe Tells Us About Life, Ethics, and Mortality One of…

    15 条评论
  • The Perils of Taking on Venture Debt

    The Perils of Taking on Venture Debt

    By Geoffrey Moore Author – The Infinite Staircase: What the Universe Tells Us About Life, Ethics, and Mortality This…

    27 条评论
  • AI eats (some) business models

    AI eats (some) business models

    By Geoffrey Moore Author – The Infinite Staircase: What the Universe Tells Us About Life, Ethics, and Mortality…

    23 条评论
  • What gives life meaning? (Continuing to address the Philosophical Questions List)

    What gives life meaning? (Continuing to address the Philosophical Questions List)

    By Geoffrey Moore Author – The Infinite Staircase: What the Universe Tells Us About Life, Ethics, and Mortality Here…

    10 条评论
  • Tracing the Evolution of Law on the Infinite Staircase

    Tracing the Evolution of Law on the Infinite Staircase

    By Geoffrey Moore Author – The Infinite Staircase: What the Universe Tells Us About Life, Ethics, and Mortality Fair…

    3 条评论
  • Trying to Decide What to Do with AI? Think like a Venture Capitalist

    Trying to Decide What to Do with AI? Think like a Venture Capitalist

    By Geoffrey Moore Author – The Infinite Staircase: What the Universe Tells Us About Life, Ethics, and Mortality If you…

    9 条评论
  • Time is Money—and You Can Take That to the Bank

    Time is Money—and You Can Take That to the Bank

    By Geoffrey Moore Author – The Infinite Staircase: What the Universe Tells Us About Life, Ethics, and Mortality…

    15 条评论
  • Managing Disruption—The Metrics That Matter

    Managing Disruption—The Metrics That Matter

    By Geoffrey Moore Author – The Infinite Staircase: What the Universe Tells Us About Life, Ethics, and Mortality There…

    7 条评论
  • What constitutes consciousness?

    What constitutes consciousness?

    By Geoffrey Moore Author – The Infinite Staircase: What the Universe Tells Us About Life, Ethics, and Mortality This is…

    8 条评论
  • Are we truly free to make choices?

    Are we truly free to make choices?

    By Geoffrey Moore Author – The Infinite Staircase: What the Universe Tells Us About Life, Ethics, and Mortality This is…

    11 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了