https://stratechery.com/2016/the-state-of-technology-at-the-end-of-2016/

The State of Technology at the End of 2016
Tuesday, December 13, 2016              
This is the third year I have written an article about the state of technology. 
In 2014 I described the three historical epochs of consumers technology — the 
PC, browser, mobile — and the outline of the fourth, which I suggested was 
messaging; in 2015 I refined the fourth to be Facebook specifically (it is 
clearly WeChat in China) and wondered if Slack could form a similar foundation 
for the enterprise.

Each of these epochs laid the ground work for what followed: PCs were where 
browsers ran, and browsers enabled the build-out of cloud services that made 
mobile so compelling. Then, the omnipresence of mobile devices created the 
conditions for social media, specifically Facebook, to dominate a staggering 
amount of attention. What, then, has Facebook wrought?

Well, Donald Trump, for one.

>From Startup to Establishment

For most of its existence Silicon Valley has been synonymous with startups; 
even during the rise of the PC and it was Redmond-based Microsoft that became 
the establishment. The scrappy underdogs were clustered alongside the San 
Francisco Bay, and disruption was their mantra. And disrupt they have: while 
the IT era was about making existing companies more efficient, the Internet era 
has shaken the very foundations on which those companies rest. The media is the 
starkest example: Google and Facebook didn’t create better newspapers, but 
rather reduced newspapers — and all other forms of media — to just another 
piece of content no better or worse than cat GIFs or baby pictures jostling for 
attention in their carefully manicured gardens.

The pervasiveness of those gardens — not just Facebook and Google, but Apple 
and Amazon as well, and Microsoft at work — can at times seem overwhelming; 
these companies are anything but scrappy startups, and their relative market 
caps — five of the top eight (and the top five at the end of last quarter) — 
confirm that Silicon Valley is very much the establishment. That establishment, 
though, is of a far different nature than what came before.

Facebook, the Media, and Trump

The dispute about Facebook and fake news is the most obvious example: while 
previous claims of bias were about sins of commission — editors and journalists 
fitting the news to their preconceived notions — Facebook and Google both are 
being accused of a sin of omission: not actively removing purposeful mistruths 
from their platform. Critics contend that Facebook in particular bears some 
responsibility for recent election results, that absent “fake news” Donald 
Trump would not be the president-elect.

In fact, Facebook is responsible for Trump’s election, but not because of fake 
news, at least not directly. Rather, as I explained in the spring, the 
devolution of traditional media driven by Facebook’s commodification of content 
was not an isolated event: the power of America’s political parties directly 
stemmed from the fact that media (and its paid advertising model) was the 
gatekeeper of information. From that piece:

[Facebook has created] a curious dynamic in politics in particular: there is no 
one dominant force when it comes to the dispersal of political information, and 
that includes the parties described in the previous section. Remember, in a 
Facebook world, information suppliers are modularized and commoditized as most 
people get their news from their feed. This has two implications:

All news sources are competing on an equal footing; those controlled or bought 
by a party are not inherently privileged
The likelihood any particular message will “break out” is based not on who is 
propagating said message but on how many users are receptive to hearing it. The 
power has shifted from the supply side to the demand side


This is a big problem for the parties as described in The Party Decides. 
Remember, in Noel and company’s description party actors care more about their 
policy preferences than they do voter preferences, but in an aggregated world 
it is voters aka users who decide which issues get traction and which don’t. 
And, by extension, the most successful politicians in an aggregated world are 
not those who serve the party but rather those who tell voters what they most 
want to hear.

Telling users what they want to hear is, of course, the real reason fake news 
gains traction: Facebook has monetized confirmation bias with its singular 
focus on engagement, and while I count that as a lesser evil than active 
political censorship, the broader point is that everyone and everything — 
mainstream media, Macedonian teens, even political parties — are competing on a 
playing field where by default no one has a louder megaphone than anyone else.

The Rise of E-Commerce

This leveling of the playing field is not limited to media; I wrote this summer 
about the rise of Dollar Shave Club which leveraged YouTube, social media 
marketing, and e-commerce to challenge P&G’s Gillette in the market for U.S. 
razors. It didn’t matter that P&G had the money to build brand affinity with 
endless advertising and the leverage with retailers to ensure that Gillette 
dominated shelf space: virality is free, targeted advertising excels at niches, 
and when it comes to e-commerce shelf space is infinite.

Amazon is seeking to do the same thing for all physical goods, and the 
potential effects are massive. Just consider Amazon Prime’s two headline 
features: free shipping and Prime Video, and then consider the primary players 
in the consumer economy: consumer packaged goods companies leverage their size 
to secure shelf space in big box retailers; both are reached by people driving 
their cars. All three industries are the largest TV advertisers, and Prime is 
taking aim at all three: Prime Video and its competitors are increasingly 
dominating non-live television viewing, and there are no commercials, while 
Amazon Prime obviates the need to visit retailers, and its infinite shelf space 
means niche products are much more viable.

This transformation echoes the impact of Facebook on the media: there is a 
dramatic leveling of the playing field. The advantages of scale that guaranteed 
success in the post-war era just don’t matter very much when advertising is 
cheap, shelf space is infinite, and shipping is free. And, just as Facebook’s 
breakdown of the media broke down the political parties, Amazon’s break-down of 
physical retail will have its own knock-on effects: carrying household supplies 
is a major reason to own a car, for example, which means Amazon is a laying the 
foundation for a service like Uber to shift from being a car supplement to a 
full-on substitution.

New Opportunities

There is a certain symmetry to Dollar Shave Club and Donald Trump: both began 
by targeting niches and leveraging social media, but more importantly, the 
companies and institutions most invested in stopping them found themselves 
powerless to do so because their point of leverage had been circumvented by the 
Internet. That certainly ought to strike fear into the heart of any executive 
or politician whose institution is predicated on the old world order, but it is 
also an unprecedented opportunity to build something new.

To that end the most exciting companies in technology are those enabling just 
that: new companies for a new world without gatekeepers. Companies like Square, 
making it easy to accept payments offline, and Stripe doing the same online; 
both are expanding into adjacent services that make it easier to get a business 
off the ground. It has been encouraging to see Zenefits get its act together: 
the HR company and its competitors make it far easier and cheaper to grow that 
business. And today’s giants play a role as well: AWS has made it dramatically 
cheaper to start any sort of Internet company, and Amazon.com’s marketplace 
model means small companies can leverage the billions of dollars the company 
has invested in fulfillment — or they can go to Etsy, holding off the giants, 
with a share price that is up 50% on the year. Facebook has a role to play as 
well: a Facebook page is much easier for a small business to set up and is much 
more discoverable than a web page, and its advertising products are 
approachable and measurable in a way that even newspaper ads never were.

Who is Being Disrupted?

One of the ironies of The Innovator’s Dilemma being Silicon Valley’s favorite 
business book is that Clayton Christensen was writing for a completely 
different audience than your stereotypical techie. With his theory of 
disruption Christensen offered a compelling explanation for how it was big 
company managers, equipped with the best education and aided by the best 
consultants armed with the latest in best practices, fell prey again and again 
to upstart competitors with seemingly inferior products; technologists took it 
as a manual.

What remains so compelling about Christensen’s work is not its analysis of disk 
drives or steel mills but rather the focus on incentives, and how managers 
failed precisely because they did what they were supposed to do: meet the needs 
of their best customers in a way that ensured the viability and continued 
growth of their business — at least in the short term. The problem came when 
new technologies that were inferior for current customers’ needs made it 
possible to serve completely new customers at lower prices; rational managers 
at incumbent companies would dismiss those technologies, allowing new entrants 
to serve those markets, but given that inferior technologies improve far more 
quickly than do user needs, those new entrants would eventually threaten 
incumbents with cheaper technology that was just as good if not better.

The risk for the technology industry is that we are now the incumbents: we have 
a stake in keeping things exactly as they are, and we build products for 
ourselves — we’re our own best customers. That, though, cedes the future to the 
powerless — those with nothing to lose under the current system will by sheer 
necessity build the new.

That is why we need more companies like those above, ones that work for 
everyone, enabling the application of human creativity and ingenuity to the 
creation of a new world order. I know at this moment in history that seems 
optimistic, but the truth is that a new world order is inevitable; the question 
now is who will shape it.



Sent from my iPhone

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