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A case study in anticipating standards: Ethernet

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The DIX 'blue-book' acts as road map from 1980 forward ... Key: Creating value around proprietary implementation of widely used non-proprietary standard ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A case study in anticipating standards: Ethernet


1
A case study in anticipating standards Ethernet
  • A. The formation of communities what happened?
  • Fighting inside a standards committee
  • Strategic Alliance Formation
  • B. Community formation analysis of ethernet
  • Why secondary communities have disadvantage
  • Why non-proprietary standards might lead to
    bigger markets
  • C. Capturing value strategy in communities
  • Short term v. long term profitability
  • The (dis)advantages of proprietary standards

2
A. The formation of Ethernet what happened?
  • IEEE committee meets in 79-80 amid confusion
  • Many LAN vendors, unclear technical/mkt
    opportunity
  • Many participate just to learn
  • Potential need its solution?
  • For PCs, factory control, linking minicomputers,
    office equipment, linking incompatible systems
  • No clear technical win for wide variety of needs
  • Many experiments in labs other innovative
    prototypes
  • Supplier situation Table 4.1
  • Incumbent vendors looking for complementary
    product (Xerox, Prime, Wang, Apple, IBM, NCR)
  • Entrants, entrants, entrants

3
A. The DIX alliance
  • The DIX (Dec, Intel, Xerox) alliance
  • Overcome interoperability of systems
  • Combining different market/technical capabilities
  • The role of Metcalfe as evangelist/inventor
  • Why DIX favored non-proprietary standard?
  • LAN not core mkt ? assumed benefit to core mkt
  • Nurture early adoption by users
  • Attract in complementary component suppliers
  • Higher volume helped defray costs of ICs
  • Did the original motives actually play out?
  • Is this the strategy of a leader or someone
    catching-up?
  • Capturing value in complementary markets primary
    concern.

4
A. Why a split arose in the IEEE committee
  • Nobody could garner 2/3 of the votes (of firms)
  • Why not look for an alternative venue or
    endorsement?
  • Committees of experts, once started, are hard to
    stop
  • Firm interests/visions differ ? no common ground
  • Factory ring, IBM ring, Ethernet
  • Some proprietary LAN companies do not
    participate, why?
  • Ethernet positioned as low-end, token ring as
    high end
  • Standards committees are human affairs
  • Arguments may not have clear technical answer
  • Firm self-interest interferes w/compromise
  • Previous investment steer beliefs
  • Participants attend to learn about technological
    direction

5
B. Ethernet community formation
  • Pioneer firms pursued different strategies
  • The DIX blue-book acts as road map from 1980
    forward
  • Ungermann-Bass pursue mini-terminal connex
  • 3Com commits to PC connex
  • Bridge, Interlan, Excelan find niche try to
    grow
  • Brief window for funding
  • The VC community unsure of prospects
  • Need to demonstrate a commercial beach-head in
    short run
  • Bob Metcalfes endorsement plays a role
  • Differentiation specialization increase w/mkt
    size
  • Not direct competitors initially, mostly
    complementary
  • Mkt scale economies or whole greater than sum
    of parts

6
B. Why the non-IBM LAN technologies failed
eventually
  • Inevitable competitive evolution of new
    markets
  • Prices decline, increasing commodization of
    components
  • More uses arise and more users arrive ? foster
    new niches
  • Early designs become mismatched to new needs
  • Proprietary LANs vulnerable small communities
  • Dependence on external events (Corvus Apple)
  • Fear of orphaning (Datapoint mismanagement)
  • Dependence on a single application or mkt niche
  • Slower virtual cycle in small community
  • Variety specialization vulnerable to single
    firm blunder
  • Less new entry, so less adoption, then less new
    entry, etc. ? become distant from other
    communities w/virtuous cycles

7
C. Capturing value in evolving communities
  • A technical capability in search of multiple uses
  • DIX wanted complementary products. It got that
    more.
  • Who did well at first in the ethernet mkt?
  • U-B used the non-proprietary technology for
    connecting minicomputers terminals
  • Initial success. Why? Large installed base of
    incompatible systems from proprietary vendors
  • Did they use their good start for later success?
    Sort of
  • Why 3Com eventually did quite well
  • Betting early on connecting PCs when others do
    not
  • Niche market at first, growth later. Why?
  • Using this lead to stay ahead later. What did
    they learn?

8
C. Capturing value when proprietary communities
compete
  • Why proprietary communities stayed small
  • Users wary of locking into single vendor for
    durable good
  • Users wary of locking into a particular
    technological implementation being orphaned
  • If users have choices of only proprietary
    communities, then what does competition look
    like?
  • Familiar form of competition with lock-in
  • Vendors compete on price early
  • Vendors compete on promises early
  • Later adopters judge vendors on product lines,
    previous success in evolving the technology into
    customer needs
  • Familiar form of competition with lock-in

9
C. Capturing value when proprietary compete with
non
  • Non-proprietary standard invites more competition
  • Multiple vendors ? more users, I.e., the virtual
    cycle
  • Bigger variety lower prices grows around
    standard
  • Every vendor benefits from being part of standard
    in demand
  • Non-proprietary communities grow in fits starts
  • Capturing value What points of differentiation?
    New niches
  • Profits arise temporarily in niches, but hard to
    sustain
  • Profits depend on complementors whole community
  • Continuous evolution of capabilities ? there may
    not be a harvesting phase ? looks chaotic to
    contemporaries
  • Proprietary standards do OK if not overwhelmed
  • The leading firms did well until non-proprietary
    community became big

10
C. Strategic choices over proprietary standards
  • When all other firms are proprietary
  • Early competition matters a great deal
  • Vendors must limit downsides of lock-in to
    attract users
  • Strong temptation to become non-proprietary for
    temporary SR competitive benefit against other
    proprietary firms
  • When at least one firm uses non-proprietary
    standard
  • Harder to capture value w/o proprietary standard
  • Being part of larger market ? benefit from
    complementors from the inevitable commodization
    of some parts
  • Key Finding a unique valuable position within
    community
  • Key Creating value around proprietary
    implementation of widely used non-proprietary
    standard

11
Learning points
  • Community formation
  • Strategic actions affiliated with alliances
  • Competitive behavior takes place inside community
  • The evolution of communities is distinct from the
    evolution of specific firms
  • The trade-offs b/w mkt size and firm profitability
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