Why Software Is Eating The World
By MARC ANDREESSEN
This week, Hewlett-Packard (where I am on the board) announced that it
is exploring jettisoning its struggling PC business in favor of
investing more heavily in software, where it sees better potential for
growth. Meanwhile, Google plans to buy up the cellphone handset maker
Motorola Mobility. Both moves surprised the tech world. But both moves
are also in line with a trend I've observed, one that makes me
optimistic about the future growth of the American and world economies,
despite the recent turmoil in the stock market.
In an interview with WSJ's Kevin Delaney, Groupon and LinkedIn investor
Marc Andreessen insists that the recent popularity of tech companies
does not constitute a bubble. He also stressed that both Apple and
Google are undervalued and that "the market doesn't like tech."
In short, software is eating the world.
More than 10 years after the peak of the 1990s dot-com bubble, a dozen
or so new Internet companies like Facebook and Twitter are sparking
controversy in Silicon Valley, due to their rapidly growing private
market valuations, and even the occasional successful IPO. With scars
from the heyday of Webvan and Pets.com still fresh in the investor
psyche, people are asking, "Isn't this just a dangerous new bubble?"
I, along with others, have been arguing the other side of the case. (I
am co-founder and general partner of venture capital firm
Andreessen-Horowitz, which has invested in Facebook, Groupon, Skype,
Twitter, Zynga, and Foursquare, among others. I am also personally an
investor in LinkedIn.) We believe that many of the prominent new
Internet companies are building real, high-growth, high-margin, highly
defensible businesses.
![[SOFTWARE1]](http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/OB-PF964_SOFTWA_AV_20110819184437.jpg)
Today's stock market actually hates technology, as shown by all-time low
price/earnings ratios for major public technology companies. Apple, for
example, has a P/E ratio of around 15.2—about the same as the broader
stock market, despite Apple's immense profitability and dominant market
position (Apple in the last couple weeks became the biggest company in
America, judged by market capitalization, surpassing Exxon Mobil). And,
perhaps most telling, you can't have a bubble when people are constantly
screaming "Bubble!"
But too much of the debate is still around financial valuation, as
opposed to the underlying intrinsic value of the best of Silicon
Valley's new companies. My own theory is that we are in the middle of a
dramatic and broad technological and economic shift in which software
companies are poised to take over large swathes of the economy.
More and more major businesses and industries are being run on software
and delivered as online services—from movies to agriculture to national
defense. Many of the winners are Silicon Valley-style entrepreneurial
technology companies that are invading and overturning established
industry structures. Over the next 10 years, I expect many more
industries to be disrupted by software, with new world-beating Silicon
Valley companies doing the disruption in more cases than not.
![[SOFTWARE2]](http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/OB-PF966_SOFTWA_A_20110819184541.jpg)
Why is this happening now?
Six decades into the computer revolution, four decades since the
invention of the microprocessor, and two decades into the rise of the
modern Internet, all of the technology required to transform industries
through software finally works and can be widely delivered at global
scale.
Over two billion people now use the broadband Internet, up from perhaps
50 million a decade ago, when I was at Netscape, the company I
co-founded. In the next 10 years, I expect at least five billion people
worldwide to own smartphones, giving every individual with such a phone
instant access to the full power of the Internet, every moment of every
day.
On the back end, software programming tools and Internet-based services
make it easy to launch new global software-powered start-ups in many
industries—without the need to invest in new infrastructure and train
new employees. In 2000, when my partner Ben Horowitz was CEO of the
first cloud computing company, Loudcloud, the cost of a customer running
a basic Internet application was approximately $150,000 a month.
Running that same application today in Amazon's cloud costs about $1,500
a month.
![[SOFTWARE4]](http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/OB-PF972_SOFTWA_AV_20110819185306.jpg)
With lower start-up costs and a vastly expanded market for online
services, the result is a global economy that for the first time will be
fully digitally wired—the dream of every cyber-visionary of the early
1990s, finally delivered, a full generation later.
Perhaps the single most dramatic example of this phenomenon of software
eating a traditional business is the suicide of Borders and
corresponding rise of Amazon. In 2001, Borders agreed to hand over its
online business to Amazon under the theory that online book sales were
non-strategic and unimportant.
Oops.
Today, the world's largest bookseller, Amazon, is a software company—its
core capability is its amazing software engine for selling virtually
everything online, no retail stores necessary. On top of that, while
Borders was thrashing in the throes of impending bankruptcy, Amazon
rearranged its web site to promote its Kindle digital books over
physical books for the first time. Now even the books themselves are
software.
Today's largest video service by number of subscribers is a software
company: Netflix. How Netflix eviscerated Blockbuster is an old story,
but now other traditional entertainment providers are facing the same
threat. Comcast, Time Warner and others are responding by transforming
themselves into software companies with efforts such as TV Everywhere,
which liberates content from the physical cable and connects it to
smartphones and tablets.
Today's dominant music companies are software companies, too: Apple's
iTunes, Spotify and Pandora. Traditional record labels increasingly
exist only to provide those software companies with content. Industry
revenue from digital channels totaled $4.6 billion in 2010, growing to
29% of total revenue from 2% in 2004.
Today's fastest growing entertainment companies are videogame
makers—again, software—with the industry growing to $60 billion from $30
billion five years ago. And the fastest growing major videogame company
is Zynga (maker of games including FarmVille), which delivers its games
entirely online. Zynga's first-quarter revenues grew to $235 million
this year, more than double revenues from a year earlier. Rovio, maker
of Angry Birds, is expected to clear $100 million in revenue this year
(the company was nearly bankrupt when it debuted the popular game on the
iPhone in late 2009). Meanwhile, traditional videogame powerhouses like
Electronic Arts and Nintendo have seen revenues stagnate and fall.
The best new movie production company in many decades, Pixar, was a
software company. Disney—Disney!—had to buy Pixar, a software company,
to remain relevant in animated movies.
Photography, of course, was eaten by software long ago. It's virtually
impossible to buy a mobile phone that doesn't include a software-powered
camera, and photos are uploaded automatically to the Internet for
permanent archiving and global sharing. Companies like Shutterfly,
Snapfish and Flickr have stepped into Kodak's place.
Today's largest direct marketing platform is a software company—Google.
Now it's been joined by Groupon, Living Social, Foursquare and others,
which are using software to eat the retail marketing industry. Groupon
generated over $700 million in revenue in 2010, after being in business
for only two years.
Today's fastest growing telecom company is Skype, a software company
that was just bought by Microsoft for $8.5 billion. CenturyLink, the
third largest telecom company in the U.S., with a $20 billion market
cap, had 15 million access lines at the end of June 30—declining at an
annual rate of about 7%. Excluding the revenue from its Qwest
acquisition, CenturyLink's revenue from these legacy services declined
by more than 11%. Meanwhile, the two biggest telecom companies, AT&T
and Verizon, have survived by transforming themselves into software
companies, partnering with Apple and other smartphone makers.
![[SOFTWARE5]](http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/OB-PF973_SOFTWA_AV_20110819185344.jpg)
LinkedIn is today's fastest growing recruiting company. For the first
time ever, on LinkedIn, employees can maintain their own resumes for
recruiters to search in real time—giving LinkedIn the opportunity to eat
the lucrative $400 billion recruiting industry.
Software is also eating much of the value chain of industries that are
widely viewed as primarily existing in the physical world. In today's
cars, software runs the engines, controls safety features, entertains
passengers, guides drivers to destinations and connects each car to
mobile, satellite and GPS networks. The days when a car aficionado could
repair his or her own car are long past, due primarily to the high
software content. The trend toward hybrid and electric vehicles will
only accelerate the software shift—electric cars are completely computer
controlled. And the creation of software-powered driverless cars is
already under way at Google and the major car companies.
Today's leading real-world retailer, Wal-Mart, uses software to power
its logistics and distribution capabilities, which it has used to crush
its competition. Likewise for FedEx, which is best thought of as a
software network that happens to have trucks, planes and distribution
hubs attached. And the success or failure of airlines today and in the
future hinges on their ability to price tickets and optimize routes and
yields correctly—with software.
Oil and gas companies were early innovators in supercomputing and data
visualization and analysis, which are crucial to today's oil and gas
exploration efforts. Agriculture is increasingly powered by software as
well, including satellite analysis of soils linked to per-acre seed
selection software algorithms.
The financial services industry has been visibly transformed by software
over the last 30 years. Practically every financial transaction, from
someone buying a cup of coffee to someone trading a trillion dollars of
credit default derivatives, is done in software. And many of the leading
innovators in financial services are software companies, such as
Square, which allows anyone to accept credit card payments with a mobile
phone, and PayPal, which generated more than $1 billion in revenue in
the second quarter of this year, up 31% over the previous year.
Health care and education, in my view, are next up for fundamental
software-based transformation. My venture capital firm is backing
aggressive start-ups in both of these gigantic and critical industries.
We believe both of these industries, which historically have been highly
resistant to entrepreneurial change, are primed for tipping by great
new software-centric entrepreneurs.
Even national defense is increasingly software-based. The modern combat
soldier is embedded in a web of software that provides intelligence,
communications, logistics and weapons guidance. Software-powered drones
launch airstrikes without putting human pilots at risk. Intelligence
agencies do large-scale data mining with software to uncover and track
potential terrorist plots.
Companies in every industry need to assume that a software revolution is
coming. This includes even industries that are software-based today.
Great incumbent software companies like Oracle and Microsoft are
increasingly threatened with irrelevance by new software offerings like
Salesforce.com and Android (especially in a world where Google owns a
major handset maker).
In some industries, particularly those with a heavy real-world component
such as oil and gas, the software revolution is primarily an
opportunity for incumbents. But in many industries, new software ideas
will result in the rise of new Silicon Valley-style start-ups that
invade existing industries with impunity. Over the next 10 years, the
battles between incumbents and software-powered insurgents will be epic.
Joseph Schumpeter, the economist who coined the term "creative
destruction," would be proud.
![[SOFTWARE6]](http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/OB-PF975_SOFTWA_A_20110819185427.jpg)
And while people watching the values of their 401(k)s bounce up and down
the last few weeks might doubt it, this is a profoundly positive story
for the American economy, in particular. It's not an accident that many
of the biggest recent technology companies—including Google, Amazon,
eBay and more—are American companies. Our combination of great research
universities, a pro-risk business culture, deep pools of
innovation-seeking equity capital and reliable business and contract law
is unprecedented and unparalleled in the world.
Still, we face several challenges.
First of all, every new company today is being built in the face of
massive economic headwinds, making the challenge far greater than it was
in the relatively benign '90s. The good news about building a company
during times like this is that the companies that do succeed are going
to be extremely strong and resilient. And when the economy finally
stabilizes, look out—the best of the new companies will grow even
faster.
Secondly, many people in the U.S. and around the world lack the
education and skills required to participate in the great new companies
coming out of the software revolution. This is a tragedy since every
company I work with is absolutely starved for talent. Qualified software
engineers, managers, marketers and salespeople in Silicon Valley can
rack up dozens of high-paying, high-upside job offers any time they
want, while national unemployment and underemployment is sky high. This
problem is even worse than it looks because many workers in existing
industries will be stranded on the wrong side of software-based
disruption and may never be able to work in their fields again. There's
no way through this problem other than education, and we have a long way
to go.
Finally, the new companies need to prove their worth. They need to build
strong cultures, delight their customers, establish their own
competitive advantages and, yes, justify their rising valuations. No one
should expect building a new high-growth, software-powered company in
an established industry to be easy. It's brutally difficult.
I'm privileged to work with some of the best of the new breed of
software companies, and I can tell you they're really good at what they
do. If they perform to my and others' expectations, they are going to be
highly valuable cornerstone companies in the global economy, eating
markets far larger than the technology industry has historically been
able to pursue.
Instead of constantly questioning their valuations, let's seek to
understand how the new generation of technology companies are doing what
they do, what the broader consequences are for businesses and the
economy and what we can collectively do to expand the number of
innovative new software companies created in the U.S. and around the
world.
That's the big opportunity. I know where I'm putting my money.
Mr. Andreessen is co-founder and general partner of the venture capital
firm Andreessen-Horowitz, which has invested in Facebook, Groupon,
Skype, Twitter, Zynga, and Foursquare among others. He also co-founded
Netscape, one of the first browser companies.
—Mr. Andreessen is co-founder and general partner of the venture capital firm Andreessen-
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