Launching a Rocketship Off Someone Else's Back

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Launching a Rocketship Off Someone Elses Back How to Build on Other Platforms Josh Elman

Transcript of Launching a Rocketship Off Someone Else's Back

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Launching a Rocketship Off Someone Else’s Back How to Build on Other Platforms

Josh Elman

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Everybody warns you not to build on top of other company’s platforms.

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We see headlines like this

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Which have gone on for a while..

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And platforms spin it like this

“More control for our community” “To help further our company’s vision”

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Is it worth the risk to build on a platform?

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The Short Answer:

Yes. (It’s the only way to get big.)

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Everyone starts from zero.

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And everyone starts by hustling

Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel originally marketed his app by email blasting his network and posting in online forums.

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Hustle: Building on top of Craigslist

In the early days, the Airbnb founders built an integration with Craigslist for their ads to reach a larger audience. (They also sold politically themed cereal to get out of debt.)

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Hustle: Google Friends Newsletter

Google co-founder Larry Page sent out a monthly newsletter to inform fans about company news. (The company looked a lot different back then)

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Virality is the goal

... but you don’t have any users.

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You need help.

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The Longer Answer:

You need to get in front of users to grow. All companies start with zero users.

You need to go where the users already are. Big platforms have lots of users.

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We live in an era of HUGE platforms

3.5B searches per day

1.5B users

1B+ active users

1B active users

700M active users

400M active users

300M active users

300M users

Growing very fast

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These companies want to grow too..

Better results for a query

Friends sharing more content

Users sharing and watching more videos

Friends and family talking more

Sharing and viewing more pictures

Sharing and viewing more content

Professionals sharing more content

More content

Friends and family talking more

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Partnerships used to require massive BD Deals.

The little startup Google partnered with Yahoo to power their search function until 2004. Today, partnerships between big and small companies are harder to come by than ever.

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Platforms are partnerships. Stop asking and start building.

The New Partnership:

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Let’s try and understand why companies open a platform.

But first..

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Every company has a massive product wish list with thousands of features.

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But even the biggest companies have resource constraints.

“The Top 20”If they are lucky, companies can build out their top top 10 features, maybe 20.

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Their roadmap is huge and they must prioritize top features.

Why would a company want a platform?

Platforms offer a powerful network effect.

The fastest way to more features is to get others to build them.

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If we build it (a platform), they (developers) will come.

True or False?

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False.

Developers will only come when there are clear incentives and opportunities to build a big business on top of a platform.

True or False?

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Every successful platform needs:

Clear incentives for developers to get value. “Show me the users or money!”

Clear value for users. More to do on the product = more time & more fun Trust from users. Users have to trust that the platform protects them.

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But here’s what they are afraid of:

“Pee in the pool”Platforms fear developers will spam their users.

“Robbers”Platforms fear losing data and monetization opportunities. If you are building a core feature, they may compete with you or even just block you.

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The win-win platform model

Startup

Massive userbase

Useful features

More engagement,

More $$$

Quickly gain users

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Platforms are not there to help you build your company. Their goal is to grow their own business.

But, remember:

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In short..

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Knowing that, here are things to keep in mind when building on platforms.

Do not fill gaps. Don’t build a product that solves a temporary deficiency in the platform.

Do not expect platforms to be constant. Prepare for inevitable platform shifts.

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Why do platforms shift?

Users of the main product want new experiences. If any consumer product stops getting better, it will die.

The platform’s business model will keep evolving. Opportunities to make money can radically shift the platform strategy.

Users stop trusting or using apps. The platform has to address bad behaviors and increase user trust.

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Build your product to be independent.

Only use the platform for

acceleration.

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Examples of hitting the platform risk

Slide built on top of Facebook, but failed to generate “front door” direct traffic and lost users when Facebook shifted their platform.

SocialCam used the Facebook graph and created an auto-share loop. Facebook found the loop to not match user’s expectations, and changed its algorithms.

Meerkat used the Twitter social graph to accelerate growth, but Twitter shut them down to promote Periscope, the live streaming app they had bought.

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Examples of success

Instagram grew quickly by making it easy to post photos on Facebook and Twitter, but also successfully became a destination that users visited everyday.

YouTube made it simple to embed videos on Myspace, and then drew the Myspace user base to their site to watch more content.

Dubsmash integrated with WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger for easy distribution, creating a viral share loop.

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Platforms can work for you.

Remember the value exchange. In exchange for giving the platform users better content or features, the platform provides users and usage. They are an accelerant. Never get comfortable. Platforms can change. Take advantage of the moment at hand. Only core users who come through your front door matter. Don’t ever get confused with big numbers of visitors who pass through.

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Again..

Build your product to be independent.

Only use the platform for

acceleration.

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New platforms to start thinking about

Slack Pinterest FB Messenger

(Maybe Snapchat?)

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Thank you.

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