The 7 Powers with Hamilton Helmer & Jeff Lawson - podcast episode cover

The 7 Powers with Hamilton Helmer & Jeff Lawson

Apr 29, 202136 minEp. 106
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Episode description

In this episode, James Currier, Jeff Lawson, and Hamilton Helmer delve into the importance of defensibility, the 7 Powers of strategy, and the role of inventiveness. They discuss network economies using Uber as a case study, examine scale economies, and explore the concept of Counter Positioning. They also discuss the challenges for incumbents adapting to new business models, the power of branding, and cornered resources. The episode ends with insights on process power and developing entrepreneurial power.

Transcript

Hi. This is James Currier, general partner at NFX Capital, and you're listening to the NFX podcast. 5 years ago, I wrote an op ed tech crunch title, defensibility Pete the most value for founders. I was seeing founders make the mistake of focusing too much on their sugary sweet growth and not enough on their long term durability. And on effects, we've now written about the 4 defensibilities available to founders in the modern digital age, brand, scale, embedding, and network effects.

That last one, network effects is incredibly strong. But not all network effects are created, and not all great companies need network effects to be durable. The key is to study the different defensibilities available and understand which are available to your company right now. Someone who sees this clearly in ways that others do not is Hamilton Beller, author of the 7 powers.

In it, Hamilton defines 7 different powers that great companies can use to achieve defensibility, iconic founders from rehastings, Flicks to Patrick Colisson and Stripe Twilio's Jeff Lawson have said that the 7 powers are one of their core insights behind their company.

Our friend, Jeff Lawson, who is co founder and CEO of Twilio, has built a business now valued at over $60,000,000,000 is steadfast Beller 7 powers framework needs to be in the hands of every great entrepreneur out there, and we couldn't agree more. So in this special episode of the UNFX podcast, Pete are Jeff and Hamilton to talk through the 7 powers. So I first met Hamilton. Actually, I didn't Hamilton. A package showed up on my door one day.

And I opened it up and and it was this book, and it was called 7 powers. And it had a little sticky note on the Currier. And the sticky note said, Jeff Epstein, a friend, thought you would enjoy 7 powers strategy capital is a twilio shareholder scribble scribble scribble scribble scribble. And I was like, okay. And I put the book aside as one does and just you know, kind of forgot about it. Until a few months later, I was talking to Jeff Epstein, who happens to be on Twilio's board.

And I remembered that, oh, apparently, he had recommended a book to me, basically, and I went and found it, and I read it. And I'm like, oh, this is signed by the author some guy, Hamilton. Alright. Well, let me read it. So I started reading the book, and I said, this is really good. And I will tell you, I am a big skeptic of strategy, like the word strategy and the way business leaders often invoke it. Yet this book really spoke to me. And so I called up Hamilton. I wanted to talk to him.

And that began the process of me really understanding the 7 powers, getting to know Hamilton recommending the 7 powers book my leadership team at Twilio and even having several sessions when biting Hamilton in to speak to the team at Twilio. So it's my great pleasure to introduce Hamilton Helmer to everybody listening today, Hamilton. Welcome. Thanks, Jeff. It's a delight to be here with you. So admire, you know, what you've managed to accomplish with Twilio.

My whole career has been around thinking about what makes businesses successful, and I'm very area, and I think that, entrepreneurship and building companies is the lifeblood of the vitality of a society, and it's really hard. So I just admire what you've accomplished enormously. It's a delight to connect up again. Well, thank you, Hamilton. I'm gonna start by saying why I think strategy is I usually say strategy is a dirty word, and then you can rebut that with the hypothesis of your book.

How's that sound? That sounds good. So what I have often told Twilio employees through the years is that strategy is a dirty word because it is this idea that the people at the top of the company have developed a strategy, and everyone in the company is supposed to blindly follow this strategy, whether or not your customers want you to follow that strategy.

And therefore, I've always thought that strategy is basically just a way of telling your people to pay attention to the C suite and the the executives of the company as opposed to the customer. So one of the things I've often said at Twilio is there is only one true strategy. Build products and services for which your customers will pay you. That is the one true strategy. And anything that distracts from that is really preventing us from executing the 1 true strategy.

And my example has always been, for some reason, this always has stuck in my head. Google Plus because if you think back to, like, the early, you know, 20 eighteen's, whatever, Google clearly had a strategy. Our strategy is to go beat Facebook. And the strategy required integration of social across every part of Google's properties. And from people I've spoken with, every product manager, every engineer, everyone on the front lines of building all those products.

We're like, why are we doing this? Our customers don't want this. It's making the products worse. But you pretty much had to do it because that was the strategy of the company. And sure enough, customers hated it. Nobody wanted and that was just a lot of lost energy in that. And it's not that, like, they shouldn't have tried something new. It was at this, quote unquote, strategy was driven by an executive idea of who their competition was as opposed to what customers wanted.

And that's what has always been my example of why I call strategy a dirty word. But then I read 7 powers, and I started to think a bit differently about it. So Hamilton, why don't I give you a chance to re buy my natural skepticism of strategic. Yeah. It won't be much of a rebuttal because I'm in violent agreement with you, I'd say. And in fact, it's why I wrote the book because I believe that strategic planning is is essentially an oxymoron.

And because what you're talking about is trying to treat strategy as something that's, top down plan that you impose on people. And when you really understand it deeply enough and go back to what strategy is about. What you realize is that its root, its first cause is inventiveness you know, and that shouldn't be a surprise. That's the first cause of everything that's really important, I think.

And so the challenge that I tried to take on in my book was what I call the Minsburg Challenge because there was this wonderful strategy thinker way back when I wrote this very influential article, Henry Minsburg, that said that the strategy, you don't sit down and think through a logically designed strategy, but you actually craft it, which is very similar, I think, and consistent with what you're saying, Jeff, is that this is something that evolves

over time as smart business people responsive to their markets and customers develop. And so the question is, what could somebody like me whose whole career has been around this topic of what makes businesses enduring a successful offer to anybody like you or your team who's in this exercise of crafting. And what I realized is you have to be a lot more modest about. It's not that you hire me and all of a sudden I turn you know, lemons into lemonade or something like that.

It's rather that I can provide you a cognitive guide to what builds an enduringly great business. And so the key there is the enduring part, because that's where strategy comes in.

And, so what I've learned after looking at hundreds of cases of companies I've advised to hundreds of cases that my students have pulled apart at Stanford is that businesses, there's a durability aspect, which is essential to this, And so the question you ask yourself, what is it about certain businesses that keeps the force of competition Pete? What kind of thing do you invent?

And if you go back to the Google plus thing, one of the reasons, of course, that that NFX would types would be very hip on this is that social is a multi sided platform, and you have to get critical mass. And if you don't get there, there's no value to customers, and they didn't get there. And so that was just not worth much. So my book is really about what it takes to develop one of these structures that gives you this durability. And that's what power is.

Well, and I like that you reframed the notion of strategy, right, because there's so many, like, I'm always amazed at what people call strategy. I'm like, I don't think that's strategy. I'm pretty sure it's just an idea that you're calling strategy because you want people to pay attention as opposed to really being a strategy.

I like that you don't really use the word strategy very much in the book, but you define what the real goal is, which is power and powers a, you know, kind of a funny word, right, because it can be perceived as, you know, control or all sorts of things that may be antitrust, regulators might not want, but power in your definition is essentially the idea of, like, what are the conditions to create durable returns for shareholders, like long periods of outsized returns to paraphrase your language.

And that struck with me because that is clearly the goal of every business leader and every entrepreneur. It's not to have a strategy or to, you know, align the troops or anything like that. Like, really, what you're trying to do is to create out size return and do that durably.

And one of the things that strikes me is in the technology world, people do get overly rotated Like, there's only one idea of strategy that seems to have taken hold in the technology world, and it is essentially network effects when I was raising money for Twilio in our, you know, series a round you know, I'd give my whole pitch and the VCs would say, oh, that's interesting. Okay. So how do you have network effects? Remember saying, well, I don't that's not exactly our business.

Like, we're not Facebook, but this other ways we're gonna build power. And, look, you call out. I love the thing I resonate with me about the book is you said, well, like, you know, network effects, you call them network economies is one such power, but there are actually 7 powers and great businesses can have any number of these. In fact, several of them working in conjunction together. Off with network economies because it is an obvious one that people are pretty familiar with.

Hamilton, can you walk us through what network economies are and and just give us, you know, the canonical example of of where you've seen it integrate this Sure. Before doing that, I want to step back and just talk about building a business and how that relates to network effects and network economy. So I'm gonna use Uber as an example. And so think of what they've been through. This incredible invention Right? A multisided platform that revolutionizes human transport.

And then off the chart scaling, just incredible. And then the investment community goes wild. And you would think that in some way that that would be enough as a business person. Oh, this incredible accomplishment, but the issue there is that you need an economic structure that they would capture some of the value that they've created, because they've created enormous value. I mean, I sit on a board of a company in Vancouver and when I go up there, they don't allow Flint or Uber.

And so last time I had to go to the airport, I'm sitting out on the curb waiting for attack that's been called. Don't know when it's going to arrive. Eventually, after 20 minutes give up and go try and hail one down. And so this incredible value, and there are network effects here, but the problem is is that more than one company hit the benefit of that.

So Flint can also take advantage of that incredible value and compete with Uber, you can create tremendous value for customers, but you have to be able to keep some of that for yourself. And if you don't, it will end up being a business that's just not fun to manage. Your investors will be after you. Eventually, you'll probably attract activists investors, whereas if you do find a way to have power, you can become an iconic company.

So in the case of Uber, if you think of what keeps a competitor at bay, it is that there are scale densities in specific geographic scale density. So it's actually economies of scale play. But the problem here is I'll get a little geeky on you. Sorry about this. If you look at it, an n dimensional space and ask the question, what happens to the average distance between two entities in that space, like a driver and a passenger and over space. That varies with the end through.

And, of course, a two dimensional space is geographical. So there it's a square root function, which is to say they're diminishing returns. So the larger area you have, the less the advantage an Uber would have over somebody like a Flint. And so you can easily have 2 competitors in large markets, and so they compete against each other. And that will be the basis of their competition, and they'll both get benefit the network economies. And so it actually isn't a source of power.

So network economies is one of those things that's foundly Morgan, as I say, for product market Flint. So for starting businesses, it is just a whole new swaths of value or created, but it's one that is much rarer in power, and that's a confusion that often takes place. So Hamilton, see you threw out another power in that conversation you talked about scale economies, which is another power from your 7.

So talk about how scale economies then might help an Uber or a Flint to achieve some power in their business? Yeah. So scale economies come from if there's an economic relationship so that as volume increases, cost per unit goes down, it means the leaders got an advantage, right? So if you're larger, you have a lower cost position. That means that the same price as you make more money. And so that's a great thing.

And in the case of Uber and Lyft, the problem is that those scale economies diminish over the relevant range So they may not be enough so that Uber and Lyft can actually be pretty similar cost positions essentially in a market but the example I used in my book is the economies, it's Netflix, and Netflix went through this incredible transition where it's so they had this bruising battle with a blockbuster for the red envelope business.

And eventually, they emerged, but it had blockbuster taken them on hard a year earlier. I'm not sure they would have think Greg would agree with me on that. So here they are, or merge, but it's not enough. And this just gives you an idea how hard it is to be, entrepreneur, it wasn't enough because they knew that physical delivery was eventually a dying technology that would eventually be streaming.

So I had to go into the streaming business, but the problem with streaming business is that if you're just a distribution channel, anybody can do that. The technology isn't that hard. And so if you started to do that, there's an issue. So Netflix won at it. The way you would hope is sort of Flint the water They tried it out. They did their watch now feature, and it it turned out to have a modest success, but then they did the stars deal.

And the Stars deal gave them a lot on content that was really attractive to a lot of people. And all of a sudden, their subscriptions just skyrocket. So product market Flint. All of a sudden, they went, woah, streaming really does it, but the problem was the Stars deal was a one off deal that they done goes 30,000,000 or something when stars or nobody had any idea that would be that valuable.

So then the question was, would they do an at scale deal where people realize how valuable this was and still good. And so they did the Epic deal, which I think was, for a $1,000,000,000 or something. And so what happened with that was now all the sudden, they were getting exclusive rights to content, and there's scale economies in that because those exclusive rights are fixed costs.

If you think of the single productions, an easy way to categorize to think about that, think of when they did the house of cards, $100,000,000, if Hulu had done the deal, Hulu was about a their size of the time, the cost per viewer would be 10x. So the cost of content per viewer went down with scale so that was the case where the scale of content's about 50% of their cost structure. So it would not diminish the scale economy. It would continue over time and remains powerful.

And that an important source of power. Ability and maybe who, not so much, and that could go on forever. It's those underpinnings that lead to a durable iconic company. Okay. So we've got a good example here of network economies of scale economies. And again, I'd say those are 2 that play a a lot of entrepreneurs, especially in the technology world they're familiar with. You know? Let's talk about some of the other ones that may be a little less obvious. Is another one.

And I really like this one. This one, especially often plays into the, you know, disruptor versus incumbent type story. Can you tell us a bit about counter positioning? Yeah. Cameron positioning is frankly my favorite. I think you asked about what was my favorite Currier. And partly because, you know, I I thought of the concept, but also because It is rather contrarian.

And, of course, from an investment side, it's terrific because it's contouring enough that it often represents good and opportunities. And so what it involves is that as a challenger, you develop a new business model that creates value. So it's better for your customers, but for an incumbent to mimic it would cause them serious damage to their business. It's like the classic innovators dilemma type story.

Yeah. It's a little different than that because and there's some fine points to that because you can be doesn't always involve technology.

I mean, I'd say in and out is counter positioned against, McDonald's and so on, but it's something that you would be very familiar Jeff, and I'll ask you kind of a question about this in a minute because sort of software eats the world perspective is that when a company develops a new business model, that's based on software and the incumbents are all Flint and not software companies to be able to now become a software company often just implies they have to blow up their company.

They have to have different people, different comp structures, different organization, a whole different perspective on life So my view of, for example, Apple, it was the iPhone versus Nokia was that Nokia was an incredibly effective hardware company. They had supply chains that were finally tuned. Their product development cycle was masterful and then apple comes along with a product that's basically software driven.

And all of a sudden, Nokia, they're faced with this existential dilemma of accepting somebody else's software or try to do it themselves, which they can't, and they would have had to blow up all their sixty business. And quite frankly, this is what VW is facing now against Tesla, and I give these extremely high marks for how aggressive. He's being in understanding that threat.

But, Jeff, actually, let me ask you because I think software driven businesses are canonical examples of this where the incumbent just has this terribly difficult choice, and that's a great example of counterposition. So the question is, you've developed a software driven company. And there are other approaches to what you do that are not software driven. If you found that people that you were originally against that tried to adjust to do it the way you do it.

Just it was almost impossible to ask for them. Well, I think oftentimes the counter quickly. When you're driving at the core economic engine of a company, they see the world through the lens of that engine, and they're so hesitant to adapt because, a, it could mean an existential crisis.

At the very least, it could be disruption in their shareholder base and things like that, but it's also just a mindset Like, when you see the world a certain way, it almost as unfathomable to see it a different way.

So I think for us, you know, the way I thought about the counter positioning that we've done, and again, I wouldn't have called it that because it was just the obvious thing that our customers wanted, but was in how we paid her use or how we charge per So the pricing model of Twilio is you sign up for Twilio and you spend your first penny to send a text message or to make a phone call or to do a video session or have chat, like, you just take these

embeddable building blocks and you only pay for what you use in an industry where there's so much around in the software side, selling of seats and licenses and all this, or on the telco side of of having a, you know, 2 year agreement to buy a line bundled with voice messages. And it's like if you're a developer building a new service, testing out a new idea, you don't wanna sign a 2 year deal, and you're not buying seats There's no such thing as seats.

You just wanna start prototyping and spend as little as possible because the more you can reduce barriers and friction, the more ideas you can enable, because experimentation is the prerequisite to innovation. Therefore, our job as Twilio is to encourage as much experimentation as possible. And I think it turns out that it's very hard for companies that are accustomed to selling Pete and licenses or, you know, 2 year deals and line access and things like that.

It becomes very hard for them to think of a business where I'm gonna sell something for a fraction of a penny. Right. Because you're like, how do I incentivize my sales team? I've got a big sales team. I gotta feed the sales team. And the ASP that used to be a $100,000 is now a penny. I can't feed a sales team like that. And so you Pete this entry point where people don't know what to make of it. They can't fathom. How could that possibly be a business?

And they certainly don't know how to execute and they have no will to cute on it, and it gives you a many years head start to build value before someone might wake up and say, oh, wow. There's something there. Maybe we should think seriously about this, but it's really hard for them. Even once they wake up, it's really hard for them to do it. Let alone the fact that they will discount it for long periods of time because they just don't understand it. Yeah. You're so right.

The heart of it is that it strikes at the economic model. And again, using a Netflix example, when they first started, HBO was a powerhouse and much larger, very profitable, and HBO went through video providers, so Comcast and so on. And so, and Netflix went over the top direct streaming. And for HBO to contemplate doing that model. You can imagine the reaction that they would get from Comcast to say you do that or you're off the system.

And so that prospect of their economics turning so badly on them James them drag their feet and drag their feet and drag their feet. And that's classic of that. And as I say, it it is quite common in software models for incumbents to have that difficulty. And again, I'll come back to the Tesla case the idea that a car is a software platform.

All of a sudden changes everything because now if you think of a traditional automobile ice manufacturer automobile manufacturers, they have these elaborate supply chains, and in those supply chains are embedded technology. So the distributor has a certain technology or the fuel injection system or this and that, and all of those subcomponents have their own integrated circuits.

You know, my favorite part about the counter positioning of Tesla versus auto manufacturers, and I'm from Detroit originally is the dealer network because you think about so Tesla doesn't have Beller, right, and literally the state of Michigan passed a law that said it is illegal to sell a car not through a dealer. Currier. So you can't buy a Tesla in the state of Michigan because they legally require dealers. You're like, oh, it makes no Okay. But here's the interesting thing.

You're like, okay. We're gonna roll out electric cars to all of our dealers. And what do the dealers say? Well, they make all their money, not by selling the cars, but by servicing them. And electric cars have, like, you know, 5% the number of moving parts than a ice car does. And so, therefore, they they break less And so the dealers would make no money as the dealers say, well, we don't want electric cars.

And so that was a more counter positioning because they had to bring their dealers along, and the dealers already has because they saw it as it would erode their ability to make their profit, but it's fascinating. We should move on because we've got 7 powers. And, look, we've talked about some of the more obvious ones. Another one is switching cost. Let's skip that one for a minute because I think there's some understanding of that out in the world.

But let's talk about branding because we all kind of intrinsically understand like, oh, yeah. That company has a brand, that there's value as equity in that brand, but really thinking about it as a power is interesting. Can you walk me through why is power a branding, and where do you see that? Like, what's your favorite example of branding as a true power? Yeah. So the key thing here, Jeff, is that there is a real difference between branding as power and brand awareness.

And not that brand awareness isn't Morgan, but you can buy add in the Super Bowl, and you will have brand awareness. But you've paid for it, but branding is something that's far more durable than that, and what it involves is building up an understanding in your customers so that they are attribute higher value to your product even though the competing product is maybe identical, you know, objectively.

And so, easy example is when you go into shop, you may pick up Del Monte pineapple just because rather than the Walmart brand or the Safeway brand, just because you have a certain amount of trust that that's gonna be a quality product. You know what you're getting. If scientists open the do cans, they'd probably find them that were identical, but you'll pay Morgan. So to build up that perception so that people actually pay more takes a long time of people becoming familiar with something.

And it can be that it is this expectation of additional quality, or it may be that you just have a good feeling about it so that you like to be seen with it. So a an Hermes handbag, you might, you know, some people pay $50,000 Morgan of but I think in the tech world, it's not that common, actually, to see branding in this form. You've developed this understanding that both your customers over time, that's something that you trust it more or you want to be seen with it.

But I think there's no question that Apple has a you know, but this was the result of very long duration process of Steve Jobs emphasizing a Aesthetics and not just talking about it, but actually building aesthetics into their corporate culture and the customers now. So I think there are many people who would sort of prefer to be seen with an iPhone than with a competing product, and not to say the products themselves aren't great.

So I think the key thing about it is that it takes this long period of time to develop that, and it only works in certain types of products, I'd say. And I think Apple is, probably a canonical example And so let's talk about 2 of the less obvious ones, cornered resource, because that's another really interesting one. And you talk about, like, employees as a cornered resource for a domain.

But, like, give us a sense of the Currier resource power and how that plays out and what your favorite example is there. Yeah. So if you have rights to certain resources, assets of some Morgan that those can't be taken away from you and that they are materially valuable and sufficient so that if they were transferred to another company, they would also enjoy the economic benefit of them, then that can be a source of value and and place for this play is very largest and patented pharmaceuticals.

So if you develop a drug that really works and you have the patent on it, that's super valuable. And if you transferred it to somebody else, they would enjoy that same value. You know, the example I lose in my book is less obvious, which Pixar. What happened there was in the early stages of Pixar.

There was an early group that went through the hell of developing Toy Story 1 and do and Bugs Life and learned how to work together in this incredible, creative way, and each of those people involved in that became able to direct these amazing movies. And so Pixar ended up with this incredible string of successes a really unparalleled in the movie business. And in sense, they had a cornered resource on the Flint that it took to make these digital films. Of that group. Right.

And individually, there are talents like that, Steven Spielberg or somebody like that, but a studio pays for those So it's the person that realizes that, not the company that hires Stevens Beller. But in this case, they were devoted to Pixar. If DreamWorks wanted to hire them away. They wouldn't go. At Disney, in fact, tried to hire back some of the resource, and they they wouldn't go. Eventually, Disney bought them. Course.

So there were a valuable resource that created the success of the company, but that Pixar and, in fact, wasn't paying all of that away to them. And so it Yeah. That's totally non obvious. You know, how did Pixar just have hit after hit after hit It wasn't like the technology per se. It was that team that worked so well together. We're literally inventing this as they went so that the brain trauma of this whole thing literally resided inside those walls. That's amazing.

Yeah. And I think if you take that a step further and you look at the later directors, it wasn't that this guaranteed that anybody that came to work for Pixar could make an amazing movie the later is having more trouble and will replace more often. And so if you think of the strategy question for Pixar, it's adding to this director pool. And I think they're doing it actually.

I mean, they're making great progress in that, but there's this initial group that was their Currier resource and for them to continue on into the future to be a great company. They need to add to that director pool. So let's talk. We have one more to hit, and then I wanna close with how people can make use of this framework, but process power is another non obvious one. So that's just 7th power, process power. Talk quickly about that.

Yeah. So process power, and the example I use in my book is Toyota and the the lean for is that if you have an incredibly complicated business processes, think of automobile production and all the supply chains in the production itself. And over time, bit by bit, you do a little of this and a little of that and Pete embedded and how you do things in the company. And Morgan, it's what one of my old professors just Beller tacit knowledge. Often it's not even written down.

And all those things together are enough to be material. In other words, enough to move the profit needle, and it turns out that a competitor who wants to do it has a terribly difficult time because either complexity, there's so many little things they have to do or opacity. Nobody even really knows exactly what's going on. The time constant being able to do that is so long. You end up like Toyota gaining a lot of Morgan chair and being highly profitable.

But, Jeff, there's an important caveat about this, which is, you know, this is CEO that most of your time is spent on operational excellence. Let's make this organization as great as it can be. And you're not spending all your time thinking about strategy. You're thinking how to make this a great Morgan, but most of the time, that's not power.

And most of the time, it's something that can be emulated, and it's absolutely appropriate that that's what you spend your time on, but it's most of the time is just something that another company that can hire away that people get to kind of look their armies of consultants that teach people best practices. It's usually something that can be imitated over time. And so process power is extremely rare. Toyota is an example.

I'd say maybe inditex with fast fashion is an example, but most of the time operational excellence in the end isn't power, but one more caveat, which is that in getting to power operational excellence, is unbelievably strategic So I'll give you a example of that, which is the early days of Apple. They had this incredible lead in personal computers, and they own the operating system.

It's so they would have had power network economies from that, and yet one that went from the Apple 2 to the Apple 3 is execution issue completely dropped the ball. You know, very costly. It didn't work well. It was pricing was wrong, and it just opened the door for the IBM Pete and Microsoft standard, and almost caused the company to end.

And so in getting to power, operational excellence is absolutely critical, but in terms of establishing a position of powers Morgan of having a position of power, it's typically not enough, but there are those rare cases where it is like Toyota where it's so complex and takes so long that you can do it. It's an uncommon form of power.

Okay. So Hamilton, one of the things that I heard you say apply to almost all of these powers is they take a long time and a lot of discipline and a lot of focus to achieve. You don't get them overnight. You usually don't get them accidentally. It is a long period of focusing and repetition and culture in a lot of the cases too to achieve these powers.

And so, you know, just to close out here how do you think that an entrepreneur are listening today should think about the journey to developing power? And, like, none of the things that we talked about are necessarily brand new things. We've heard a lot of these words before. We've all heard about brand. We've heard about network effects.

We've heard about economies of scale, but seeing them all sit there together like a menu that you can look at your business through and decide what is the best way for us to achieve power? And then methodically focus on it for long periods of time. How do you think an entrepreneur should start that journey? Yeah. Great question, Jeff, and it really gets to the heart of the matter. So the key thing here is that, first of all, getting to a position of power is a creative act.

You're figuring out something that hasn't been figured out before probably. And that takes place, as you say, over time, as you react to what customers want, how the technology is progressing, those sorts of things. You create this over time, and the message that I would like to convey here is that the overall types of power, the genotypes, if you will, are simple. There's 7 of them. As far as I know, they're only 7.

But the phenotypes, the specific and stations of them for each company are incredibly complicated. So, actually, we're doing this interview for NSX And so there are businesses based on the incredible complexity and subtlety of network effects. Right? And true across all the powers. So as a business person, you have to go into this environment and ask yourself how can I create 1 of these 7 powers and look at what's coming at you over time? This is a hard thing to do.

And after you've had this amazing experience of getting product market fit, you know, he's already go, oh, god. The journey's not done, you know, but that's the is over time, you have to figure these things out.

And it's very different than product market Flint, and so you you have to, think in a different way And what my book is about is just giving entrepreneurs and business people an understanding of what those structures are as sort of for pattern recognition as they're going through that process. Thank you so much for joining us today, Hamilton. It's been great talking to you. I feel like this is the, you know, we've just skimmed the surface of the 7 power framework.

So for anyone who's interested in really diving in, there's the book out there. I'd suggest you read it. I found it to be very useful tool of organizing the toolkit that we and leaders have to build durable businesses that are going to create value for long periods time and having that menu. So it's not just, like, words sitting out there, and it's certainly not just, hey, strategic, everybody, but actually an organized framework of the various ways you can go by. Building power Flint lightning.

So check out the book. Thank you, Hamilton, for giving us a window into your brain and into your thinking today. My pleasure, Jeff. And again, congratulations on the phenomenal thing that you've done in building Twilio. I mean, as you say, I just in awe of things like that, that you've just done such an amazing accomplishment. So it's been my pleasure to be interviewed by you. Thank you, Hamilton. I'm flattered. Alright, everybody. Have a great day. You've been listening to the NFX podcast.

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