The Next 10 Years Will Be About “Market Networks”

James Currier
6 min readJun 30, 2015

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The Last 10 Years Have Been About Social Networks — The Next 10 Will Be About “Market-Networks”

[Note: a shorter version of this article appeared on TechCrunch.]

[Disclosure: we are advisors and/or investors in many of the companies mentioned in this post including Honeybook, Houzz, Lyft, Angelist, Poshmark, Doordash, Meerkat and GoodReads]

[Note: If you invest in marketplaces, networks, market networks, and other businesses with network effects, please apply to attend the NFX Guild Conference to see NFX Guild companies present. If you run one of these companies or plan to start one, please apply for investment from NFX Guild and be a part of the next NFX Guild Class.]

Most people didn’t notice last month when a 35-person company in San Francisco called HoneyBook* announced a $22 million Series B.

What was unusual about the deal is that nearly all the best-known Silicon Valley VCs competed for it. That’s because HoneyBook is a prime example of an important new category of digital company that combines the best elements of networks like Facebook with marketplaces like Airbnb — what we call a market-network.

Market-networks will produce a new class of unicorn companies and impact how millions of service professionals will work and earn their living.

What Is A Market-Network?

“Marketplaces” provide transactions among multiple buyers and multiple sellers — like Poshmark*, eBay, Uber, Patreon*, and LendingClub.

“Networks” provide profiles that project a person’s identity and then lets them communicate in a 360-degree pattern with other people in the network. Think Facebook, Twitter, GoodReads*, Meerkat*, and LinkedIn.

What’s unique about market-networks is that they:

· Combine the main elements of both networks and marketplaces

· Use SaaS workflow software to focus action around longer-term projects, not just a quick transaction

· Promote the service provider as a differentiated individual, helping build long-term relationships

An example will help: let’s go back to HoneyBook, a market-network for the events industry.

An event planner builds a profile on HoneyBook.com. That profile serves as her professional home on the Web. She uses the HoneyBook SaaS workflow to send self-branded proposals to clients and sign contracts digitally.

She then connects the other professionals she works with like florists and photographers to that project. They also get profiles on HoneyBook and everyone can team up to service a client, send each other proposals, sign contracts and get paid by everyone else.

This many-to-many transaction pattern is key. HoneyBook is an N-sided marketplace — transactions happen a 360-degree pattern like a network, and people come to the network looking for transactions. That makes HoneyBook both a marketplace and network.

A market-network often starts by enhancing a network of professionals that exists offline today. Many of them have been transacting with each other for years using fax, checks, overnight packages, and phone calls.

By moving these connections and transactions into software, a market-network makes it significantly easier for professionals to operate their businesses and clients to get better service.

We’ve Seen This Before

AngelList* is also a market-network. I don’t know if it was the first, but Naval Ravikant and Babak Nivi deserve a lot of credit for pioneering the model in 2010.

On AngelList, the pattern is similar. The CEO of the startup creates her own profile, then prompts her personal network of investors, employees, advisors and customers to build their own profiles. The CEO can then complete some or all of her fundraising paperwork through the AngelList SaaS workflow, and everyone can share deals with everyone else in the network, hire employees, and find customers in a 360-degree pattern.

In 2013, when I met Oz and Naama Alon, two of the founders of HoneyBook, they were building a beautiful network product — a photo-sharing app for weddings. We sat down and I walked them through the new idea of a market-network. They embraced it immediately, and have taken it to a whole new level — from the design and workflow to the profile customization and business model.

Houzz* is a third good example. Houzz connects homeowners with home improvement professionals and with products they can buy for their home. They have a product that is very nearly a market-network. The company raised $165M in its last round.

Joist is another good example. Based in Toronto, it provides a market-network for the home remodel and construction industry. Houzz is also in that space, with broader reach and a different approach. DotLoop in Cincinnati shows the same pattern for the residential real estate brokerage industry.

Looking at AngelList, Joist, DotLoop, Houzz and HoneyBook, the market-network pattern is visible.

Six Attributes Of A Successful Market-Network

1. Market-networks target more complex services

In the last six years, the tech industry has obsessed over on-demand labor marketplaces for quick transactions of simple services. Companies like Uber, Lyft*, Mechanical Turk, Thumbtack, DoorDash* and many others make it efficient to buy simple services whose quality is judged objectively. Their success is based on commodifying the people on both sides of the marketplace.

However, the highest value services — like event planning and home remodels — are neither simple nor objectively judged. They are more involved and longer term. Market-networks are designed for these.

2. People matter

With complex services, each client is unique and the professional they get matters. Would you hand over your wedding to just anyone? Your home remodel? The people on both sides of those equations are not interchangeable like they are with Lyft or Uber. Each person brings unique opinions, expertise, and relationships to the transaction. A market-network is designed to acknowledge that as a core tenet and provide a solution.

3. Collaboration happens around a project

For most complex services, multiple professionals collaborate among themselves — and with a client — over a period of time. The SaaS at the center of market-networks focuses the action on a project that can take days or years to complete.

4. They have unique profiles of the people involved

Pleasing profiles with information unique to their context give the people involved a reason to come back and interact here. It captures part of their identity better than elsewhere on the Web.

5. They help build long-term relationships

Market-networks bring a career’s worth of professional connections online and make them more useful. For years, social networks like LinkedIn and Facebook have helped built long-term relationships. However, until market-networks, they hadn’t been used for commerce and transactions.

6. Referrals flow freely

In these industries, referrals are gold, for both client and service professional. The market-network software is designed to make referrals simple and more frequent.

7. They increase transaction velocity and satisfaction

By putting the network of professionals and clients into software, the market-network increases transaction velocity for everyone. It increases the close rate on proposals and speeds up payment. The software also increases customer satisfaction scores, reduces miscommunication, and makes the work pleasing and beautiful. Never underestimate pleasing and beautiful.

Social Networks Were The Last 10 Years. Market-Networks Will Be The Next 10.

First we had communication networks like telephones and email. Then we had social networks like Facebook and LinkedIn. Now we have market networks like HoneyBook, AngelList, DotLoop, Houzz and Joist.

You can imagine a market-network for every industry where professionals are not interchangeable: law, travel, real estate, media production, architecture, investment banking, personal finance, construction, management consulting, and more. Each market-network will have different attributes that make it work in each vertical, but the principles will remain the same.

Over time, nearly all independent professionals and their clients will conduct business through the market-network of their industry. We’re just seeing the beginning of it now.

Market-networks will have a massive positive impact on how millions of people work and live, and how hundreds of millions of people buy better services.

I hope more entrepreneurs will set their sights on building these businesses. It’s time. They are hard products to get right, but the payoff is potentially massive.

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James Currier

James is a Managing Partner of NFX, a Seed stage venture capital firm in SF, Palo Alto and Israel. James previously founded four successful companies.