The Business of Platforms is an in-depth look at platform strategy and digital innovation. In this book, we explore how a small number of companies have come to exert extraordinary influence over every dimension of our personal, professional and political lives. We also question whether there are limits to the market dominance and expansion of these digital juggernauts. Finally, we discuss the role governments should play in rethinking data privacy laws, antitrust laws, and other regulations that could rein in abuses.
The goal of the book is to help managers and entrepreneurs build platform businesses that can stand the test of time and win their share of battles with both digital and conventional competitors. We argue that platforms can produce the fastest growing and highest profits companies in the world; and they can also become a formula for losing a fortune while threaten democracy and political stability.
We have five major themes in the book:
1) The world’s most valuable companies are all platforms, in part because platforms have network effects, with the potential for a winner-take-all or winner-take-most outcome.
2) Platforms come in 3 flavors: innovation platforms, transaction platforms and hybrid platforms. We suggest that the world is moving towards more and more hybrids, and we identify the key steps in building a successful platform.
3) Failure is more likely than winner-take-all: mispricing, mistrust, mistiming, and hubris lead to hundreds of failures compared to relatively few successes.
4) Old ‘dogs’ can learn new tricks: conventional companies can adapt to a platform world with a buy, build, or belong strategy.
5) Platforms are a double-edge sword: abuse of power, bullying poor labor practices and bad actors can undermine even the most successful platforms.
The book concludes with an exploration of platform battles of the future, including voice wars (Alexa vs. Hey Google vs. Siri), ridesharing and autonomous car platforms, quantum computing, and CRISPR.