Saturday, August 22, 2009

Evolutionary Economics & How Small Business Can Survive Among Giants

Building my company has made me think a lot on how a potential entrant to a market dominated by giants should position itself. After a couple weeks of pounding my head against the wall, I thought of a Discovery special that I saw on the rain forest, where the canopy created by 300 ft trees stifled the growth of life on the ground. This seemed to be a perfect analog to my conundrum, and two questions came to mind: 1) How did certain species evolve to position themselves for growth when no sunlight was available and 2) In such a stifling environment, how did the Amazon become one of the most diverse ecological systems in the world?

Here were some of my findings (I came across a U.Michigan website that summarized some fascinating studies on competition in the evolutionary biology context):
  1. In answering the first question, it seems natural selection offers two answers. Some plants did not compete with the big guys, simply adapting to living on the forest's floor with less sunlight. Other plants actually used the gargantuan trees, and climbed up them towards the bright sun over the canopy. These very elegant solutions reminded me of small business either positioning in a niche market or partnering with larger firms to leverage their distribution channels.
  2. The answer to the second question proved much more interesting, as it went to the heart of the studies summarized in the aforementioned website. Findings showed that whenever competition over limited resources existed within any system, all interactions were destructive (ie: no two species could co-exist). The dominant species always exterminated the subordinate one. The key to survival in competition was always adapting to position a species in a way that minimized overlap in resource consumption with the dominant ones. This suggests that adaptation is not a way of survival but the only way to survive, and that diversity is an inevitable state in any perfectly competitive environment.
The lesson from this analog, in my opinion, seems to be that going after Microsoft P&G or any competing giant is suicide (no kidding!). Yet evolution does seem to offer one glimmer of hope for small businesses that cannot afford an outright war with the big guys: the vine. Nature's solution to our problem was to adapt in a way that made partnership with the dominant player possible, and this should be a key option for any small business entering a multibillion dollar market should consider before taking the niche approach.

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