Over the last year, I’ve been in a number of discussions where the concept of Winner Takes All was raised, and it’s now starting to annoy me. In a Winner Takes All market, there is a dominant competitor who takes a very large share of the profits. An example at the moment is the mobile phone manufacturing market, where it seems Apple is the winner who is taking all (or, at least, most). However, there may be a widespread view that any market relating to the Internet is Winner Takes All, and that would be a problem.
Winner Takes All is typically put forward to justify either betting big (eg. intentionally making multi-year losses in order to get the scale of users/customers needed to be dominant in a market) or not doing anything (eg. because only one can win anything, and the likelihood is that it won’t be you). In other words, Winner Takes All markets are for only the bravest of the brave. But if anything relating to the Internet is Winner Takes All, then unless you’re pretty special, you should stay off the Internet. Or so the thinking goes.
You might expect that I disagree – and you’d be right. Let me break down why.
Firstly, there are mature businesses on the Internet that have multiple big players, and yet not a single winner. Web mail is a good example, with the biggest services (from Microsoft, Yahoo and Google) having similar sized user-bases.
Service | Users |
---|---|
Microsoft Hotmail | 325 million |
Yahoo Mail | 298 million |
Google GMail | 289 million |
And while one counter-example is enough to disprove a hypothesis, here’s another one to show the first wasn’t merely an exception. Desktop web browser share is largely split between three big players (Microsoft, Mozilla and Google). Another one is Internet-connected game consoles. I’d say this myth is busted.
A response to the above is granting that not every market relating to the Internet is applicable to Winner Takes All, but that there are some important ones that are. For example, Internet services with “network effects” (those where the more users that adopt it, the more value they are to those users) are in such a market, and Facebook’s dominance in social networking illustrates this.
While this watered-down Winner Takes All view appears more reasonable, there are two lines of evidence that discount it also. The first is the historical record of all the previous social networking services where it appeared there was a winner, but then they lost to a subsequent service that rapidly took over. Back in 2007, MySpace was considered dominant over Facebook, and before MySpace were other services like GeoCities which, according to Wikipedia, in 1999 was the third most visited site on the Internet. If a winner can be displaced so quickly, can they really be said to have “won”?
The second line of evidence is the active competition still occurring in the social networking market. There are both alternative services such as Twitter, LinkedIn and Yammer, and also similar services operating in specific (yet still sizeable) markets such as Qzone, Renren or Sina Weibo in the Chinese language market. If a service isn’t dominant everywhere, can they really be said to have taken it “all”?
But wait, I hear someone say. Cyworld was dominant in the South Korea language market, and yet now Facebook has displaced Cyworld over the course of a year. Doesn’t this show that the same could happen in China and Facebook is operating in a Winner Takes All market? Well, yes it could happen in China, but no, all this shows is that Facebook is a good competitor. There’s no need to explain away Facebook’s appeal through claiming their rise in South Korea was an inevitable consequence of the market structure.
So, I don’t find Winner Takes All convincing, but the danger is that some people believe it and choose not to attempt to launch valuable Internet-based ideas. We users of the Internet would end up deprived of those services as a result. But, it seems the good news is that plenty of people do not believe in the pessimistic world view of Winner Takes All and are happily putting their products and services on the Internet.
It may be a question of faulty classification. The story I’ve heard — and I base this largely on an old episode of the CBC’s Spark — is not that the internet is prone to monopoly, but that media markets are prone to monopoly.
So, for instance, in the early days of radio there were thousands of local stations, which over the years were eventually agglomerated into a handful of empires. You can see the same story in TV and newspaper, to the point where we now have strict laws in the traditional markets to explicitly prevent this agglomeration.
I know the question of what is “internet media” is a subtle one — which you’ve previously discussed here. But I would hazard that applications that depend only on private information — mail, back-up, blogs — are less prone to this than those based on the diffusion of public information — facebook, youtube. I’ll leave you to ponder the social forces at work there.
For instance, I am writing this comment on your blog. But I know I am pissing in the wind, because presumably the real discussion in going on over at Facebook, which has effectively annexed your blog from its actual host.
By the way, where _did_ you get that photo?
Thanks Bob. I found this a really interesting way to look at it, and you could very well be right.
However, something that is about public information, but isn’t really “media” as such, is internet auction sites. eBay seems to have been the winner in most countries… except in Poland where the winner is a site called Allegro!
And don’t worry about Facebook – there’s been nary a comment on this article over there. I’m not fussed. Facebook is a poor place to have this sort of conversation anyway.
Oh, and I got this photo (and most of the photos I use on the blog) from Flickr. I just do a search for photos and look under “Interesting”.