Stop Worrying about competitors

Sammy Abdullah
3 min readFeb 22, 2021

Sammy is the Managing Director and Cofounder of Blossom Street Ventures. Email him directly at sammy@blossomstreetventures.com, especially founders.

Many entrepreneurs we speak to obsess over what their competitors are doing. While it’s good to know where you are in the market relative to peers, overly concerning yourself with your competition is counter-productive. Below are a few things you should stop doing in regards to competitors:

Stop worrying every time a competitor raises money. Especially if you’re in a new market. A lot of that money your competitor just raised will inevitably go to building the market, which is a positive for you. If your competitor is throwing a lot of dollars at marketing to make customers aware they exist, savvy customers will often research alternatives which means they’ll inevitably find you as well. So long as you have a great solution, your competitors marketing spend will actually result in new business for you. Additionally, the more money your competitors have raised, the less acquirable they are; large rounds at high valuations limit options for exit.

Stop worrying about competitors’ revenue. Let’s say you happen to find out a competitor is doing $100mm in revenue but you’re much newer and younger, only doing $1mm. How does that piece of information change the way you do business? The answer is it doesn’t. You still need to get up every day and build the best business you can, no matter where your competitors are, so stop trying to figure out how many employees they have or how much revenue they generate.

Don’t price based on competitors’ pricing. Your competitors’ pricing page shouldn’t be the guide for your own. That’s circuitous logic and has nothing to do with your value proposition. You should be pricing based on the value your product provides to the customer. Software should aim for customers to achieve a return on their spend of at least 20x.

Focus on the right questions. The real focus should be on the questions that matter: ‘are you losing customers to competitors?’ and ‘are you beating out your competitors for new clients?’ and ‘are you offering a superior solution?’ These questions are far more important than what a competitor’s market share, revenue, or employee count is. Remember the story of eBay: at the time it was still young and Benchmark had invested $6mm in it, The Economist estimated that there were more than 150 online auction sites on the Web. One of those was far ahead of the rest, backed by Kleiner Perkins, and was already a public company with a market capitalization of about $175 million. eBay beat everyone because they focused on building the best solution they could and grew responsibly, focusing on profitability versus making a bonfire with their cash just to build market share.

In summary, it’s valuable to understand where your competitors are, but it really won’t and shouldn’t change the way you run your business, so don’t obsess over it.

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