Hardware Startups: 3 Strategies For Succeeding
“Hardware is hard” -- there are good reasons for the saying. At least compared to software, hardware typically takes longer to build and is harder to upgrade, since there is no such thing as over the air updates. That said hardware startups can and do succeed, often times against much larger and better capitalized competitors. This post is focused on 3 key strategies to succeed, which are essentially mutually exclusive.
Strategy #1: Highly Differentiated
Arguably the most common strategy amongst hardware startups. Apple that made computers accessible to homes in the 1980s making or made touch the primary interface for smartphones starting in 2007. Tesla and the Roadster launched in 2008, as a breakthrough electric sports car that could travel 200 mi with a single charge. Peloton which broke the mold for stationary bikes by allowing users to connect with content and community in real-time. In most of these cases we are talking about high-end, which means high per capita income countries like the US are kings in this strategy as their internal markets that can absorb higher price points.
Lesson on this strategy -- build a product that is quite differentiated in features so you can establish yourself in your own market segment. That way incumbents and fast followers alike will be significantly challenged in trying to catch up with you.
Strategy #2: Affordable
The exact opposite strategy is to make hardware a forgettable necessity. You could build with off-the-shelf parts or partner with others to get scale. China has arguably mastered this strategy more than any other, primarily for their own market but increasingly for other countries. DJI founded 20067 has a majority market share in consumer drones. Xiaomi founded 2010 has done the same for the low-mid end of smartphones. Huawei founded in 1987 executed a similar strategy with telecom. All three of them have gone from startup to a huge market share very quickly.
Lesson on this strategy -- build a product that is inexpensive and focus on high volume. You could even go all the way and make it completely free, which brings us to strategy #3.
Lessons Strategy #3: Give Away
An OBD port for the car so an insurance can find out if this drive is safer than the other one. A heart monitor that a patient can wear at home and flags issues for the doctor. A smart lock that allows hotels to grant / revoke access to guests and get rid of physical keys. In these examples from mobility, health and IoT, a startup could have very well given the hardware completely free and monetized on the service. It’s the class SaaS, with the startup often incurring loss on the hardware itself and making up eventually on a recurring revenue stream.
Lesson on this strategy -- build a hardware that is essentially a gateway to data, then build a huge offering around that. And beware that this can happen across an entire industry. Consider for instance telecom, where the installed capacity is getting commoditized very fast courtesy of WhatsApp or WeChat, and where they are working to build business models on services.
So what should you as a hardware entrepreneur do? Analyze your market and competition and think very deeply which of these three strategies your product falls in. Even more so than software, once you make a choice it will be incredibly difficult to change it but executing well is in itself a huge barrier to entry.
I am the Managing Partner and Cofounder of Tau Ventures in Silicon Valley and these are purposely short articles focused on practical insights (I call it gl;dr -- good length; did read). Many of my writings are at https://www.dhirubhai.net/in/amgarg/detail/recent-activity/posts and I would be stoked if they get people interested enough in a topic to explore in further depth. If this article had useful insights for you comment away and/or give a like on the article and on the Tau Ventures’ LinkedIn page, with due thanks for supporting our work. All opinions expressed here are my own.
Sr. Director & GM @ Matterport | ex-Uber | ex-Samsung
5 年Great food for thought, Amit. I'd say that retail / GTM is just as important as 1, 2, and 3 and can at times compensate for weaknesses.? Jean-Fran?ois (JF) Legourd?is driving toward strategy #3?with HaloLife.
Building First-of-Kind Bespoke Partnerships Across AI, Consumer Tech & Media ? Strategic GTM Executive ? Global Head of Tech BD @ Amazon Music
5 年Amit good article as usual! I'd add -- Building differentiated experiences requires designing custom hardware (big COGS) and bringing advanced technologies which are delivering on that differentiation... Otherwise, #1?is hard to achieve with 2 & 3 as stated. I would Add #4) Nail your Innovation Strategy & Jobs-to-Be-Done :)
Working with companies at the junction of technology innovation and elevating the human experience.
5 年Short, sweet, and on point.