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Open / Closed Platform Strategies:How, When & Why Geoffrey Parker Freeman School of Business, Tulane gparker@tulane.edu Marshall Van Alstyne Boston University & MIT mva@bu.edu,marshall@mit.edu
MVA Information Economics Research Platforms & Network Effects Communications Markets Information & Productivity Economics of IP
Why we are here today How can firms such as IBM, AT&T and others create  nonlinear  shareholder value from platforms in ways that Apple, Google,  Facebook and Salesforce.com do?
1981-1997 Microsoft beats Apple Apple launched the personal computer market but Microsoft licensed widely, building a huge developer ecosystem. By the time of the antitrust trial, Microsoft had more than 6 times the number of developers. © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
Apple 1996 Michael Dell “I’d shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders.”
Apple 2000
Apple passes Microsoft May 26, 2010 Using a platform strategy, Apple becomes the most valuable tech firm in the US, representing $310Bn to Microsoft’s $204Bn. Chart shows % growth. © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
Technology Smackdown
9 Google vs. Microsoft vs. Apple
Technology Smackdown
11 Technology Smackdown
12 Network vs Computer Network as the Computer Computer as the Network
Managerial Implications Understand: Winners in a platform market generally                 have the “best” platform strategy, not necessarily                        the “best” product Best platform? Open (but not too open) interfaces Modular architectures (easy to build on/extend) Compelling complements (generally result of vibrant ecosystem) Best product?  Best standalone value proposition, but while starting here is good, usually not enough to win a platform market Decision for YOU and IBM: product strategies or platform strategies? 13 Source: Cusumano 2011
Agenda Understanding platforms    Externalities and network effects in ecosystems Winner-Take-All Elements of platform strategy Choke points and platform evolution Pla
Ongoing Platform Battlegrounds 15
16 Platform Definition A foundation technology or set of components (could also be a service) used beyond a single firm  Allows multiple parties (“market sides”) to transact across the platform Value of the platform may increase non-linearly with more users – depends on strength of network effects.
Platform Examples Desktop OS: Unix, Mac, Windows PDAs: Palm, Psion, Newton Game Consoles: Wii, Xbox, Playstation Network Switches: Cisco, IBM, HP Multimedia: Adobe/Flash, MS/Silverlight, Google-Apple/HTML5  Payment Systems: Paypal, Google Checkout, Visa, Apple, Mobile Felica Mobile Devices: iPhone, Android, Symbian, Blackberry Enterprise Systems: Salesforce, Oracle, i2, IBM, SAP Social Networks: Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, Monster, Twitter Batteries: Sony, Panasonic, Sanyo, A123 Web Search: Google, Bing+Yahoo!, Baidu Ebooks: Amazon, iPad, Nook, Sony Smart Grids: IBM etc. Health Care: Microsoft, WebMD, IBM etc.
Agenda Understanding platforms    Externalities and network effects in ecosystems Winner-Take-All Effect Elements of platform strategy Choke points and platform evolution AT&T Platforms: Breakout exercise Pla
19 Pop Quiz: What are “network externalities?” Hint: they matter for pricing, winner-take-all markets, and strategy…
20 A “network externality” is a demand economy of scale. Examples: phone, fax, IM, email networks.
21 Supply vs. Demand Scale Economies Cost Econ of Scale Demand Econ of Scale Demand Demand Supply Supply ,[object Object]
 Monopolistic supply
 Utilities, Semiconductors
 Often falling avg cost
 Monopolistic supply
 OS, IM, MMOGStandard Goods Price Demand Supply Quantity ,[object Object]
 More competitive supply
 Oil, Soda, Bread,[object Object]
23 Reinterpreting Network Externalities Where is the interaction when your neighbor rents “Lord of the Rings”? In fact, his rental may mean you have to wait!
24 Traditional Linear Value Chain Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 $ $ $ Value accumulates from stage to stage Minimal Network Effects
Apple iPod pre-Platform User Content Apple $ $  Product First Thinking Standard linear value chain   User matches MP3 player to library  Minimal network effects © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
Apple iPod post-Platform User Content $ $ Apple  Triangular platform supply network  Apple owns financial chokepoint  Apple matches users to content  Stronger network effects © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
27 A two-sided network has  four network effects Asame-sideeffect for each side, i.e., preference regarding number of other users on own side Across-side effect in each direction, i.e., preference regarding number of users on other side Side 1 Side 2 $ $ Platform
28 Managing network effects often involvessubsidy; Who should get it?
Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects Mistake of Netscape See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects User sensitivity to price & quality Mistake of Netscape Denver vs. Boston real estate markets See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects User sensitivity to price & quality Value added Mistake of Netscape Denver vs. Boston real estate markets Mistake of 1984 Apple See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects User sensitivity to price & quality Value added Marginal costs Mistake of Netscape Denver vs. Boston real estate markets Mistake of 1984 Apple Mistake of FreePC See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects User sensitivity to price & quality Value added Marginal costs Interfering same-side effects Mistake of Netscape Denver vs. Boston real estate markets Mistake of 1984 Apple Mistake of FreePC Mistake of Covisint See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects User sensitivity to price & quality Value added Marginal costs Interfering same-side effects Marquee users Mistake of Netscape Denver vs. Boston real estate markets Mistake of 1984 Apple Mistake of FreePC Mistake of Covisint Mistake of Microsoft See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
Agenda Understanding platforms    Externalities and network effects in ecosystems Winner-Take-All Effect Elements of platform strategy Choke points and platform evolution AT&T Platforms: Breakout exercise Pla
Homing and Switching Costs 1 SETUP + 1ONGOING Mono-homing 2 SETUPS +  1 TERMINATION + 1 ONGOING Switching 2 SETUPS + 2 ONGOING Multi-homing See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
When do Winner-Take-All Networks Emerge? Large Supply/Demand Effects (FB vs gas engine) Large Multi-Homing Costs (OS vs credit cards). Niche specialization is less feasible. Windows © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
How Apple is killing standalone platforms Usr Book Usr Mus Kindle Zune Sony Amazon Microsoft Usr Gam User Music TV User Dvpr HTML Publi PSP MP3 Video Calls Games Web eBooks Apple has vastly stronger network effects. © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
How Apple is killing standalone platforms Usr Book Usr Mus Kindle Zune Sony Amazon Microsoft Usr Gam User Music TV User Dvpr HTML Publi PSP MP3 Video Calls Games Web eBooks Sony could have done this – has many great standalone products. Google is not making this mistake with Android © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
How Apple is killing standalone platforms Usr Book Usr Mus Kindle Zune Amazon Sony MS Zune Usr Gam User Music TV User Dvpr HTML Publi PSP MP3 Video Calls Games Web eBooks Message for IBM: A great standalone product  might not be sufficient. © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
How Apple is killing standalone platforms Usr Book Usr Mus Kindle Zune Sony Amazon Microsoft Usr Gam User Music TV User Dvpr HTML Publi PSP MP3 Video Calls Games Web eBooks See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2011). “Platform Envelopment,” Strategic Management Journal.
Agenda Understanding platforms    Externalities and network effects in ecosystems Winner-Take-All Effect Elements of platform strategy Choke points and platform evolution AT&T Platforms: Breakout exercise Pla
Identifying choke points that matter ,[object Object]
Telecom – CPE equipment, physical pipe (last mile), billing
Online retail (Amazon.com) – customer base, distribution infrastructure, affiliate relationships
SAP – Access rights of developers to participate on the platform, certification, in-store sales, billing.,[object Object]
45 Openness vs. Control Maximum protection ≠ Maximum Value Proprietary Your Share Open Industry Value Add Set-Top Boxes were too closed, 3rd parties never added value.
46 Openness vs. Control Maximum protection ≠ Maximum Value Proprietary Your Share Open Industry Value Add Linux is so open (viral GPL) it’s difficult to control and make money.
Does Openness Work? What did Facebook do in early 2007?
Does Openness Work? It opened to developers and overtook MySpace!
Why does openness work? Platform sponsor gives away (yellow) platform value Price V1 p1 q1 Quantity Downstream enhancements add value See: Parker, Van Alstyne (2011). “Innovation, Openness & Platform Control,” SSRN.com.
Why does openness work? V2 Platform sponsor gives away (yellow) platform value Developers build apps for installed base, adding new layers of value. Benefits: Sponsor from increased sales, and downstream royalties. Developer from cost savings and installed base. Price V1 p1 q1 Quantity Downstream enhancements add value See: Parker, Van Alstyne (2011). “Innovation, Openness & Platform Control,” SSRN.com.
V4 V3 V2 Why does openness work? Platform sponsor gives away (yellow) platform value Developers build apps for installed base, adding new layers of value. Benefits: Sponsor from increased sales, and downstream royalties. Developer from cost savings and installed base. Repeat Price V1 p1 q1 Quantity Downstream enhancements add value See: Parker, Van Alstyne (2011). “Innovation, Openness & Platform Control,” SSRN.com.
Platforms get enormous value from 3rd party developers Most firms can only concentrate on most valuable apps Profits increase when others add to platform’s “Long Tail” Consider an operating system like MS Windows, Apple Mac, or Google Android
53 What does control mean? Split IP rights from point of customer contact.  Open access  Extend platform  Touch customers  Change platform Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Side 2 Platform Platform Provider Platform Provider Platform Sponsor Platform Sponsor
54 What does control mean? Split IP rights from point of customer contact.  Open access  Extend platform  Touch customers  Change platform Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Side 2 Platform Provider Platform Provider Platform Sponsor Platform Sponsor
55 Actually Parallels Concepts from OSS Split IP rights from point of customer contact. Consider 4 “freedoms” of open source: Ability to access & execute Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Platform Provider Platform Sponsor
56 Actually Parallels Concepts from OSS Split IP rights from point of customer contact. Consider 4 “freedoms” of open source: Ability to access & execute Ability to study how the program works and change it.   Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Side 2 Platform Provider Platform Sponsor
57 Actually Parallels Concepts from OSS Split IP rights from point of customer contact. Consider 4 “freedoms” of open source: Ability to access & execute Ability to study how the program works and change it.   Ability to redistribute copies. Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Side 2 Platform Provider Platform Provider Platform Sponsor
58 Actually Parallels Concepts from OSS Split IP rights from point of customer contact. Consider 4 “freedoms” of open source: Ability to access & execute Ability to study how the program works and change it.   Ability to redistribute copies. Ability to distribute mods.  Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Side 2 Platform Provider Platform Provider Platform Sponsor Platform Sponsor
59 Apple tried to control too much of the original Mac Remember MacWrite, MacPaint? Charged ~$10,000 for SDKs.   Controlled OS & HW and dominant Apps. Vertical integration choked network effects. Users Claris Apple Mac Mac OS
60 Microsoft opened much more of its ecosystem  Microsoft had 6-10X developers Open APIs / Cheap SDKs Controlled OS, licensed. Strong network effects. Users Dvprs IBM Dell … HP MS Windows
61 For real profits, control full layer Users Users Users Dvprs Flights Dvprs Providers Acer Provider Dell … HP Sponsors Debian Sponsor RedHat Ubuntu … Linux:  No one driving the bus. Limited scope of control. Joint Venture:  e.g. Orbitz airline collaboration Licensing:  e.g. Google Android
62 Danger! Users Dvprs Providers Sponsor Watch for new control points closer to customer. See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Opening Platforms: How, When & Why” Ch 6 in Platforms, Markets and Innovation (ed Gawer).
63 Danger! Users Dvprs Providers Sponsor Watch for new control points closer to customer. See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Opening Platforms: How, When & Why” Ch 6 in Platforms, Markets and Innovation (ed Gawer).
When should you close (absorb) parts of a platform ecosystem? Openness &Time: Having opened its platform, does Microsoft (or Cisco or Google or Apple) kill its ecosystem by bundling developer value into Windows? Windows: Multithreading, Disk Compression, Internet Browsing, Streaming Media, Instant Messaging, … iPhone: Flashlight, Voice Memo, shake-to-shuffle, iBooks, Voice Control, … © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne

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Platform Strategy: Openness, Innovation & Control

  • 1. Open / Closed Platform Strategies:How, When & Why Geoffrey Parker Freeman School of Business, Tulane gparker@tulane.edu Marshall Van Alstyne Boston University & MIT mva@bu.edu,marshall@mit.edu
  • 2. MVA Information Economics Research Platforms & Network Effects Communications Markets Information & Productivity Economics of IP
  • 3. Why we are here today How can firms such as IBM, AT&T and others create nonlinear shareholder value from platforms in ways that Apple, Google, Facebook and Salesforce.com do?
  • 4. 1981-1997 Microsoft beats Apple Apple launched the personal computer market but Microsoft licensed widely, building a huge developer ecosystem. By the time of the antitrust trial, Microsoft had more than 6 times the number of developers. © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
  • 5. Apple 1996 Michael Dell “I’d shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders.”
  • 7. Apple passes Microsoft May 26, 2010 Using a platform strategy, Apple becomes the most valuable tech firm in the US, representing $310Bn to Microsoft’s $204Bn. Chart shows % growth. © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
  • 9. 9 Google vs. Microsoft vs. Apple
  • 12. 12 Network vs Computer Network as the Computer Computer as the Network
  • 13. Managerial Implications Understand: Winners in a platform market generally have the “best” platform strategy, not necessarily the “best” product Best platform? Open (but not too open) interfaces Modular architectures (easy to build on/extend) Compelling complements (generally result of vibrant ecosystem) Best product? Best standalone value proposition, but while starting here is good, usually not enough to win a platform market Decision for YOU and IBM: product strategies or platform strategies? 13 Source: Cusumano 2011
  • 14. Agenda Understanding platforms Externalities and network effects in ecosystems Winner-Take-All Elements of platform strategy Choke points and platform evolution Pla
  • 16. 16 Platform Definition A foundation technology or set of components (could also be a service) used beyond a single firm Allows multiple parties (“market sides”) to transact across the platform Value of the platform may increase non-linearly with more users – depends on strength of network effects.
  • 17. Platform Examples Desktop OS: Unix, Mac, Windows PDAs: Palm, Psion, Newton Game Consoles: Wii, Xbox, Playstation Network Switches: Cisco, IBM, HP Multimedia: Adobe/Flash, MS/Silverlight, Google-Apple/HTML5 Payment Systems: Paypal, Google Checkout, Visa, Apple, Mobile Felica Mobile Devices: iPhone, Android, Symbian, Blackberry Enterprise Systems: Salesforce, Oracle, i2, IBM, SAP Social Networks: Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, Monster, Twitter Batteries: Sony, Panasonic, Sanyo, A123 Web Search: Google, Bing+Yahoo!, Baidu Ebooks: Amazon, iPad, Nook, Sony Smart Grids: IBM etc. Health Care: Microsoft, WebMD, IBM etc.
  • 18. Agenda Understanding platforms Externalities and network effects in ecosystems Winner-Take-All Effect Elements of platform strategy Choke points and platform evolution AT&T Platforms: Breakout exercise Pla
  • 19. 19 Pop Quiz: What are “network externalities?” Hint: they matter for pricing, winner-take-all markets, and strategy…
  • 20. 20 A “network externality” is a demand economy of scale. Examples: phone, fax, IM, email networks.
  • 21.
  • 24. Often falling avg cost
  • 26.
  • 28.
  • 29. 23 Reinterpreting Network Externalities Where is the interaction when your neighbor rents “Lord of the Rings”? In fact, his rental may mean you have to wait!
  • 30. 24 Traditional Linear Value Chain Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 $ $ $ Value accumulates from stage to stage Minimal Network Effects
  • 31. Apple iPod pre-Platform User Content Apple $ $ Product First Thinking Standard linear value chain User matches MP3 player to library Minimal network effects © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
  • 32. Apple iPod post-Platform User Content $ $ Apple Triangular platform supply network Apple owns financial chokepoint Apple matches users to content Stronger network effects © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
  • 33. 27 A two-sided network has four network effects Asame-sideeffect for each side, i.e., preference regarding number of other users on own side Across-side effect in each direction, i.e., preference regarding number of users on other side Side 1 Side 2 $ $ Platform
  • 34. 28 Managing network effects often involvessubsidy; Who should get it?
  • 35. Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects Mistake of Netscape See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
  • 36. Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects User sensitivity to price & quality Mistake of Netscape Denver vs. Boston real estate markets See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
  • 37. Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects User sensitivity to price & quality Value added Mistake of Netscape Denver vs. Boston real estate markets Mistake of 1984 Apple See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
  • 38. Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects User sensitivity to price & quality Value added Marginal costs Mistake of Netscape Denver vs. Boston real estate markets Mistake of 1984 Apple Mistake of FreePC See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
  • 39. Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects User sensitivity to price & quality Value added Marginal costs Interfering same-side effects Mistake of Netscape Denver vs. Boston real estate markets Mistake of 1984 Apple Mistake of FreePC Mistake of Covisint See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
  • 40. Pricing Ability to capture cross-side effects User sensitivity to price & quality Value added Marginal costs Interfering same-side effects Marquee users Mistake of Netscape Denver vs. Boston real estate markets Mistake of 1984 Apple Mistake of FreePC Mistake of Covisint Mistake of Microsoft See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
  • 41. Agenda Understanding platforms Externalities and network effects in ecosystems Winner-Take-All Effect Elements of platform strategy Choke points and platform evolution AT&T Platforms: Breakout exercise Pla
  • 42. Homing and Switching Costs 1 SETUP + 1ONGOING Mono-homing 2 SETUPS + 1 TERMINATION + 1 ONGOING Switching 2 SETUPS + 2 ONGOING Multi-homing See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
  • 43. When do Winner-Take-All Networks Emerge? Large Supply/Demand Effects (FB vs gas engine) Large Multi-Homing Costs (OS vs credit cards). Niche specialization is less feasible. Windows © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
  • 44. How Apple is killing standalone platforms Usr Book Usr Mus Kindle Zune Sony Amazon Microsoft Usr Gam User Music TV User Dvpr HTML Publi PSP MP3 Video Calls Games Web eBooks Apple has vastly stronger network effects. © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
  • 45. How Apple is killing standalone platforms Usr Book Usr Mus Kindle Zune Sony Amazon Microsoft Usr Gam User Music TV User Dvpr HTML Publi PSP MP3 Video Calls Games Web eBooks Sony could have done this – has many great standalone products. Google is not making this mistake with Android © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
  • 46. How Apple is killing standalone platforms Usr Book Usr Mus Kindle Zune Amazon Sony MS Zune Usr Gam User Music TV User Dvpr HTML Publi PSP MP3 Video Calls Games Web eBooks Message for IBM: A great standalone product might not be sufficient. © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
  • 47. How Apple is killing standalone platforms Usr Book Usr Mus Kindle Zune Sony Amazon Microsoft Usr Gam User Music TV User Dvpr HTML Publi PSP MP3 Video Calls Games Web eBooks See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2011). “Platform Envelopment,” Strategic Management Journal.
  • 48. Agenda Understanding platforms Externalities and network effects in ecosystems Winner-Take-All Effect Elements of platform strategy Choke points and platform evolution AT&T Platforms: Breakout exercise Pla
  • 49.
  • 50. Telecom – CPE equipment, physical pipe (last mile), billing
  • 51. Online retail (Amazon.com) – customer base, distribution infrastructure, affiliate relationships
  • 52.
  • 53. 45 Openness vs. Control Maximum protection ≠ Maximum Value Proprietary Your Share Open Industry Value Add Set-Top Boxes were too closed, 3rd parties never added value.
  • 54. 46 Openness vs. Control Maximum protection ≠ Maximum Value Proprietary Your Share Open Industry Value Add Linux is so open (viral GPL) it’s difficult to control and make money.
  • 55. Does Openness Work? What did Facebook do in early 2007?
  • 56. Does Openness Work? It opened to developers and overtook MySpace!
  • 57. Why does openness work? Platform sponsor gives away (yellow) platform value Price V1 p1 q1 Quantity Downstream enhancements add value See: Parker, Van Alstyne (2011). “Innovation, Openness & Platform Control,” SSRN.com.
  • 58. Why does openness work? V2 Platform sponsor gives away (yellow) platform value Developers build apps for installed base, adding new layers of value. Benefits: Sponsor from increased sales, and downstream royalties. Developer from cost savings and installed base. Price V1 p1 q1 Quantity Downstream enhancements add value See: Parker, Van Alstyne (2011). “Innovation, Openness & Platform Control,” SSRN.com.
  • 59. V4 V3 V2 Why does openness work? Platform sponsor gives away (yellow) platform value Developers build apps for installed base, adding new layers of value. Benefits: Sponsor from increased sales, and downstream royalties. Developer from cost savings and installed base. Repeat Price V1 p1 q1 Quantity Downstream enhancements add value See: Parker, Van Alstyne (2011). “Innovation, Openness & Platform Control,” SSRN.com.
  • 60. Platforms get enormous value from 3rd party developers Most firms can only concentrate on most valuable apps Profits increase when others add to platform’s “Long Tail” Consider an operating system like MS Windows, Apple Mac, or Google Android
  • 61. 53 What does control mean? Split IP rights from point of customer contact. Open access Extend platform Touch customers Change platform Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Side 2 Platform Platform Provider Platform Provider Platform Sponsor Platform Sponsor
  • 62. 54 What does control mean? Split IP rights from point of customer contact. Open access Extend platform Touch customers Change platform Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Side 2 Platform Provider Platform Provider Platform Sponsor Platform Sponsor
  • 63. 55 Actually Parallels Concepts from OSS Split IP rights from point of customer contact. Consider 4 “freedoms” of open source: Ability to access & execute Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Platform Provider Platform Sponsor
  • 64. 56 Actually Parallels Concepts from OSS Split IP rights from point of customer contact. Consider 4 “freedoms” of open source: Ability to access & execute Ability to study how the program works and change it. Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Side 2 Platform Provider Platform Sponsor
  • 65. 57 Actually Parallels Concepts from OSS Split IP rights from point of customer contact. Consider 4 “freedoms” of open source: Ability to access & execute Ability to study how the program works and change it. Ability to redistribute copies. Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Side 2 Platform Provider Platform Provider Platform Sponsor
  • 66. 58 Actually Parallels Concepts from OSS Split IP rights from point of customer contact. Consider 4 “freedoms” of open source: Ability to access & execute Ability to study how the program works and change it. Ability to redistribute copies. Ability to distribute mods. Side 1 Side 2 Side 1 Side 2 Platform Provider Platform Provider Platform Sponsor Platform Sponsor
  • 67. 59 Apple tried to control too much of the original Mac Remember MacWrite, MacPaint? Charged ~$10,000 for SDKs. Controlled OS & HW and dominant Apps. Vertical integration choked network effects. Users Claris Apple Mac Mac OS
  • 68. 60 Microsoft opened much more of its ecosystem Microsoft had 6-10X developers Open APIs / Cheap SDKs Controlled OS, licensed. Strong network effects. Users Dvprs IBM Dell … HP MS Windows
  • 69. 61 For real profits, control full layer Users Users Users Dvprs Flights Dvprs Providers Acer Provider Dell … HP Sponsors Debian Sponsor RedHat Ubuntu … Linux: No one driving the bus. Limited scope of control. Joint Venture: e.g. Orbitz airline collaboration Licensing: e.g. Google Android
  • 70. 62 Danger! Users Dvprs Providers Sponsor Watch for new control points closer to customer. See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Opening Platforms: How, When & Why” Ch 6 in Platforms, Markets and Innovation (ed Gawer).
  • 71. 63 Danger! Users Dvprs Providers Sponsor Watch for new control points closer to customer. See: Eisenmann, Parker, Van Alstyne (2006). “Opening Platforms: How, When & Why” Ch 6 in Platforms, Markets and Innovation (ed Gawer).
  • 72. When should you close (absorb) parts of a platform ecosystem? Openness &Time: Having opened its platform, does Microsoft (or Cisco or Google or Apple) kill its ecosystem by bundling developer value into Windows? Windows: Multithreading, Disk Compression, Internet Browsing, Streaming Media, Instant Messaging, … iPhone: Flashlight, Voice Memo, shake-to-shuffle, iBooks, Voice Control, … © 2011 Parker & Van Alstyne
  • 73. Should Apple have opened the iPod? 65 Most firms can only concentrate on most valuable apps Profits increase when others add to platform’s “Long Tail” No! It does 1 thing only, so make it “insanely great” and own it.
  • 74. Should Apple have opened the iPhone? Most firms can only concentrate on most valuable apps Profits increase when others add to platform’s “Long Tail” Of Course! It has video, wifi, camera (scanner), accelerometer, mobile, MP3, web browsing, etc. Platforms benefit from broad contributions. But control the top several complements.
  • 75. Which applications to absorb? Apps offered by Platform Sponsor Apps offered by Developers Rule 1: Absorb the highest value applications from the ecosystem. This adds value for users and mitigates threat of disintermediation. Example: Apple iPad absorbed e-books Example: Microsoft Windows absorbed web browsing
  • 76. Anything else to absorb? Apps offered by Platform Sponsor Apps offered by Developers
  • 77. Anything else to absorb? Rule 2: Absorb features that emerge in multiple places in the ecosystem. This increases compatibility, ensures efficient implementation, and benefits other apps. Examples: Operating systems support for (i) spell check (ii) cut & paste (iii) PDF.
  • 78. We have explored the platform strategies of many firms How will you build IBM’s platform strategy?
  • 79.
  • 80. A. Gawer, M. Cusumano (2002). Platform leadership: How Intel, Microsoft, and Cisco drive industry innovation. Harvard Business School Press.
  • 81. A. Gawer, M. Cusumano (2002). “The elements of platform leadership,” MIT Sloan Management Review
  • 82. G. Parker, M. Van Alstyne (2005). “Two-Sided Network Effects: A Theory of Information Product Design.” Management Science.
  • 83. T. Eisenmann, G. Parker, M. Van Alstyne (2006). “Strategy for Two-Sided Markets,” Harvard Business Review.
  • 84. A. Gawer and M. Cusumano (2008). “How Companies become Platform Leaders.” MIT Sloan Management Review
  • 85. A. Gawer, (2009). Platforms, Markets, and Innovation. Elgar.
  • 86. G. Parker, M. Van Alstyne (2009). “Opening Platforms: How, When & Why Ch. 6 in Gawer, A. (ed) Platforms, Markets and Innovation.
  • 87. M. Cusumano (2010). Staying Power: Six Enduring Principles for Managing Strategy and Innovation. Oxford University Press.
  • 88. M. Cusumano (2010). The evolution of platform thinking. Communications of the ACM.
  • 89.

Notas del editor

  1. AT&T Platforms: Breakout exercise
  2. http://www.dailyfinance.com/2010/12/01/apple-ipad-steals-market-share-from-amazon-kindle/Apple grew from 16 to 32% in 2010
  3. http://www.dailyfinance.com/2010/12/01/apple-ipad-steals-market-share-from-amazon-kindle/Apple grew from 16 to 32% in 2010
  4. http://www.dailyfinance.com/2010/12/01/apple-ipad-steals-market-share-from-amazon-kindle/Apple grew from 16 to 32% in 2010
  5. http://www.dailyfinance.com/2010/12/01/apple-ipad-steals-market-share-from-amazon-kindle/Apple grew from 16 to 32% in 2010
  6. Enterprise Rent-a-Car – Insurance and body shop relationships, neighborhood locations