Why Competition Is So Bitter in SaaS: Oligopolies and Dominant Strategy Equilibriums
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In many segments, competition-to-the-almost-death seems the norm in SaaS.?Just look at Larry Ellison or Marc Benioff.?While both seemed to have mellowed a bit recently, you can still see it in their eyes, their press releases, their ads in the Wall Street Journal.?Ellison and Benioff clearly want to kill their competitors.?And each other.?Every day.
Why is this??I’ll admit at first I struggled to make sense of it, but once I came to Adobe and learned that the Omniture guys were just as competitive as Ellison, even with Josh James long gone, I realized it was The Way of the SaaS Universe in many categories.?But why?
I think it has to do with a combination of two basic factors:?Oligopolies in SaaS and the effectiveness of Dominant Strategy in SaaS.
First, why are many SaaS categories “Oligopical”???In other words, why are there generally just a few leaders that own almost all market share, with perhaps a few scrappy guys behind them??I think we all know why SaaS is rarely truly?monopolistic — there generally aren’t true market and network effects.?Just because I use Salesforce, you can still use HubSpot or Pipedrive or maybe NetSuite or Oracle.?I use Slack, you use Teams, or whatever.?There isn’t much data exchange.
But the cost to develop these apps becomes high, and it becomes higher as the markets emerge and in the beginning, often still remain small.?High costs + small market in beginning.?VC capital can distort this somewhat, by creating ‘room’ for an extra competitor or so — but that’s about it.?So you end up with room for only a couple of viable competitors, and some very small ones trying for scraps.
Second, the players generally are in no way interdependent – so pure dominant strategy becomes the norm.?As ugly as Apple-Samsung/Google-style conflicts are, the extremeness is unusual, because Samsung is also Apple’s largest vendor.?Most of the time on the hardware side, even when folks sue each other, it’s slightly gentler than it otherwise would be, because they’re often also each other’s customers.?Game theory says here, where there’s some level of interdependence, there’s generally an Invisible Hand that guides the competitors to an outcome that maximizes the greater good, or at least that involves a constant game of ‘chicken’, waiting to see what the other guy does first before expending effort.
With SaaS, there’s no greater good and no interdependence among competitors.?Instead, pure dominance strategy works once the top competitors have efficient scale.??Dominance strategy states that your best strategy is irrespective of anything your opponent does.?So as long as there is capital to fuel it, SaaS competitors will try to enter every possible market niche, compete in every area possible of their market and for every single customer, spread as much FUD as they can, try to steal your customers even if the ROI is close to zero.?It doesn’t matter, because there’s no downside if the capital is there.?There’s no game of chicken, of wait and see.?Because there’s no ecosystem and no interdependence.
And importantly, in enterprise SaaS, with bigger customers — there often are not?that?many economies of scale on the sales-marketing-success side.?It just keeps getting more and more expensive to acquire, service, and manage those customers.?And to build all those niche features that in the beginning you don’t need or don’t even have time to say Yes to, but later become critical to closing that extra big customer. It can be hard for a smaller team to keep up on the human capital side, in a way with a simpler B2C or SMB-focused app, maybe they could.?If you think you could rebuild?all?of Salesforce’s rich CRM functionality in even 5 years, you are dreamin’.
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OK, great, so what’s to do here???I think the learnings perhaps are as follows, beyond the obvious of build the #1 best company you can (which needs no advice or discussion):
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CMO, Hypergrowth Advisor, Took Atlassian Public
1 年I 'grew up' running awareness advertising for Larry Ellison. He repeated often that #1 made almost all the money and everyone else shared the crumbs - thus we needed to be #1 in any market we took seriously. And it guided our "#1 product" advertising strategy and our "40 of the 40 Top [Industry]" ads. Be #1 and be the choice of #1s. You certainly can make some money (especially on the smaller niche fronts) without being #1, but in the long run things often shake out as you say. Interesting article, and thoughtful inclusion effort on International Women's Day. Kudos.
25-60% Cost Savings in 60 Days ?? C-Suite Transformational Coach ?? Digitizing Operations for Efficiency & Competitiveness
1 年As I read this my head is cluttered with thoughts of 'douchey partners' eating into my workday bringing FUD, friction, excuses and consuming time that could be better used in business development instead of babysitting! You are right, don't let it get under your skin! Great post. Thank you!