yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Google, Amazon, and Netflix Know Their Most Important Product Is You | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

What really launched my serious research into network effects and the economics of network effects was some of the work that I was doing in human capital. And the notion that innovation isn’t just a transaction. Innovation is an investment in the human capital and capabilities and competencies and creativity of your customers.

Network effects are basically how customers or users create value for each other. It’s basically an external to the individual user. So an example of a network effect would be if you and I had a phone that would be great for you and I. But a network effect is the more people who use phones, the more valuable the phone network becomes. The more valuable each other become because we can call more people and more people can call us. And heck, there may even be the opportunity to do a conference call which is another form of network effect.

So network effects are basically a way that the more people participate in using a product or service, the more valuable it becomes. There’s no such thing anymore as a non-networked organization. Now admittedly some networks are better than others but we can absolutely make the case that one of the fundamental transformations over the last 50 years is the networkification of large organizations and small organizations not just in OECD countries but all over the world. Networkification has taken over the world. It’s how do you get value from these networks.

There’s a wonderful line from the first industrial sociologist, a Frenchman by the name of Frederic le Play. He was the superintendent of Ecole des Mines. And his phrase was the most important product of the mine is the miner. It’s not the coal. It’s not the metal. It’s not the tin. It’s the human capital that allows you to extract the value from the mine.

So let’s update this to the twenty-first century. The most important product of the network is the networker. Not the bids, not the bytes, not the bandwidth, not the data. It’s the people and in an Internet of things age the things, the machines, the devices on the network. If we can make networkers more valuable we make our networks more valuable. And that is indeed the recipe for an Amazon, for a Google, for a Yelp, for a LinkedIn, for an AT&T, for a Netflix.

What does Google do to make customers better? It gives them the ability to search and iterate on those searches. And what does Google do? It converts those clicks into more efficient search. That’s the essence of a web 2.0 network effects company. The same holds for the Amazon recommendation engine or for Netflix.

So what you’re doing is you’re making – you’re not just giving customers what they want. You’re investing in improving their capabilities. What was another way that Google did that? Google gave you for free Gmail email which enables it to learn more about your social network, what you’re interested in communicating about, et cetera. The same thing with LinkedIn.

So the whole notion – that’s why LinkedIn bought a company like Lynda. Not just to improve people’s resume but to improve people’s skills. So the notion of a network effect here is as we give our customers the ability to do more for themselves they can do more with us and on our network.

So in the early days of the telephone all you could do was talk to someone. Then you could do a fax. Then you could do a conference call. Then there were these things called modems that allowed you to send email. You’re increasing the capability of the customer allowed you to get more value from the network.

And indeed customers wanted to do so much you had to do what? You had to redesign the architectures and the capabilities of the network. So you have an iterative network development process here. As customer capabilities and capacities increase, you have to change the capabilities and capacities of the network, and vice versa.

More Articles

View All
The 5 Best Investments For LIFE!
Hey guys, and welcome back to the channel! So today, I wanted to share my opinion on what I believe to be the five best investments you can make in your whole life. Now, some of you may have already noticed this, and yes, I do want to give a huge shout ou…
Division in context examples
We are asked which problem can we solve with 42 divided by seven, and they explain three different scenarios. Here, we need to pick one of them, so pause this video and have a go at it before we work through it together. All right, now let’s work through…
Ron Conway - Startup Investor School Day 4
That was a, I think, a fantastic survey, a summary of how to think about what it means to be a good investor. Paul Graham actually wrote an entire essay about what it means to be a good investor, with Ron Conway as the subject of the essay. So, the guinea…
Bill Ackman's NEXT Billion Dollar Bet
Billionaire investor Bill Ackman has the power to move markets with what he says. Unlike most investors, he rarely buys and sells stocks. That is why it is a big event when Bill Ackman announces a new investment he has made within his closely followed Per…
2022 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting | 10 Minute Summary
Each year, 40,000 Warren Buffett fans and Berkshire Hathaway shareholders gather in scenic Omaha, Nebraska, to listen to investing legends Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger share their thoughts on everything from the stock market and investing all the way…
Opportunity cost and comparative advantage using an output table | AP Macroeconomics | Khan Academy
What we’re going to do in this video is draw a connection between the idea of opportunity cost of producing a good in a certain country and comparative advantage between countries in a certain good. Below right over here, we have a chart that shows the pr…