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Starbucks has an API

A colleague of mine knew I was going to be at Starbucks and at her request I picked up a beverage for her on my way out.  I ordered my cappucino at the counter and looked up her drink order on my Treo.  She wanted something called a "Venti Soy 9-Pump, No Water, No Foam Chai."

That's when I realized that Starbucks is a platform company.  Starbucks has an API.

The best platform companies are those that don't look like platform companies because most people are users of their solutions.  In Starbucks' case, their solutions are espresso, cappucino, and the other things on their menu.  But platform companies have interfaces that allows others to build their own products on top of the platform.  Go to Starbucks enough and you realize that you can order your cappucino wet or dry, with three different cow's milks or soy, with more or less shots of espresso, and on and on.   The solutions get people in the door, but the platforms empower the users to build what it is they really want given the same set of tools.  In turn, the customers become tied to the platform because it is where their solution works best. 

I've been involved with platform companies who didn't know they needed solutions to sign up customers, and solutions companies who didn't understand how important a platform could be.  None were as successful as they should have been because they never undertstood the other half of their business.  Platform leverage works like this:  Build targeted solutions that leverage the platform, gain enough customer traction to prove that great solutions can be built on the platform, make it easy for others to develop on the platform, watch your customers' happiness grow.

Next time I have to explain to someone what is important about a platform strategy, I'm taking them to Starbucks.

March 29, 2006 in Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Let's try again

I haven't blogged in a while, indeed.

Spent the last few days at DEMO, the first time I had been to that particular conference.  I've been a fan of the O'Reilly conferences lately but DEMO was a blast.  The entreprenuerial vibe was in full swing with the full spectrum of amazing products, amazing features masquerading as products, derivative products, and a couple of just plain lame products. 

My favorite company was Krugle, but that is not a surprise given that I led the investment for Omidyar Network and am a Krugle board member.  Other companies that piqued my interest included:

  • Bones in Motion:  A very innovative mobile application that tracks a runner (or cyclist, or walker) via GPS and is able to produce all sorts of on-the-fly reports and analysis about the particular workout in and of itself or within the context of a series of workouts.
  • Panaratio Database Images:  An application that somehow breaks down massive relational databases and allow the data to be quickly analyzed and imaged.  The database geek in our group was wide-eyed.
  • IPswap:  A marketplace for software development.  It's like hackers selling their services on....well, I won't say it.
  • Ugobe:  The best line of the event:  "We built a depressed toy."  This little robotic creature was amazing, and if this is the future of Target shelves I'm looking forward to my second childhood.  I'm looking less forward to being hounded to buy one for each child.
  • Multiverse:  A game platform meant to level the playing field for those that want to create spaces for collaboration without investing the $30-50MM that folks like Blizzard do when creating WoW.  Great idea, but the execution on this one is going to be a challenge.

More on DEMO later, I still want to talk about the VC mood as well as some of the themes of the conference that I thought were interesting.

February 09, 2006 in Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

You can ignore this

No Need to Click Here - I'm just claiming my feed at Feedster.

Well, you can but it isn't really going to do anything.

October 22, 2004 in Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)