A quick recap of a recent conversation on Telegram that revolves around identifying high quality companies with a strategic analysis framework
Business Strategy Analysis - *A Fresh Take* [Telegram]
Recap: Great discussion around resources that lay out a framework to analyze businesses. From Helmer’s 7 Powers to Collins’ Good to Great, the below resources help build on a lot of the business strategy fundamentals with new, critical concepts.
Comment: These frameworks are critical to making good business and investment decisions. In particular, counter-positioning / disrupting yourself (short term pain, long term gain) is a KEY point in analysis that many overlook - and often leads to investing in value-traps and/or missing the big winners in new spaces. Just ask* Scott Galloway* - the famous NYU professor/strategist - who pitched Long Macy’s (M), short Amazon (AMZN) on 5/1/2015 (source here)...
- How’s that gone?* Don’t see any headlines or trackers around this?* AMZN is up 537%, M is down 91%. His spread is NEGATIVE 628% on this trade. That’s the risk of value traps (e.g. M) vs. winners (e.g. AMZN).
Highlights:
Check out the book 7 Powers by Hamilton Helmer
- Thanks to @jlm278 for the recommendation + review of the book
- The 7 powers: Scale economics, Network economics, counter-positioning, switching costs, branding, cornered resource, process power
- Author is a strategist + active equity investor - the book is useful in helping people identify qualities of high quality / strategically well positioned companies.. As well as helping business owners improve their internal strategies
- The 7 company-specific powers he lays out are meant to drive sustainable competitive advantages and differentiated returns
- Many are relatively well-known, but others are more novel - likely counter-positioning: when a newcomer adopts new + superior biz model which incumbents can’t (or won’t) mimic because its value destructive to their existing business
- Think about* JCPenney or Sears* ignoring any real investment / strategy around leveraging the Internet* - *now they are either bankrupt or on the verge of bankruptcy, while Amazon continues to grow stronger
Check out this Stratechery article on the Innovator’s Dilemma - it walks through the concept of counter-positioning, just under a different name
On the counter-positioning point above, management teams incentives structures are often very short-term in nature - so they are focused on maximizing short term margins and profits (even if it destroys long-term shareholder value)
- This is what we see manifesting today in markets - the CEOs at banks (JPM/Jamie Dimon, etc.), airlines, auto OEMs and so on have simply used low interest rates to buyback shares and pay themselves.. NOT invest in the future. And as a result we are seeing massive growth of the ‘disruptors’ - from Amazon, to Tesla, to Spotify
Jim Collins’ book Good to Great is another excellent resource along these lines - the best companies look to disrupt themselves, and always think about building a self-perpetuating flywheel around their core competitive advantage
- Ignoring these key frameworks/concepts can destroy your wealth:
- Just ask Scott Galloway - the famous NYU professor/strategist - who pitched Long Macy’s (M), short Amazon (AMZN) on 5/1/2015 (source here)...
- How’s that gone?* Don’t see any headlines or trackers around this?* AMZN is up 537%, M is down 91%. His spread is NEGATIVE 628% on this trade. That’s the risk of value traps (e.g. M) vs. winners (e.g. AMZN).
3 Comments
In terms of companies that embody/embrace the above frameworks, here's a quick list that comes to mind (below). Throw up your thoughts as well.
Winners
Losers
Other Winners
VRSN
CPRT
ROL
FB
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