Don’t Be Afraid of Competition

Nathan Lustig
Nathan Lustig: Staying Out Of The Cubicle
2 min readOct 22, 2009

I just got back from a trip to New York. While I was there, I met with a promising entrepreneur who has a great startup that has been pretty successful so far. He is in the middle of expanding his business nationwide. We came upon the topic of competition and how to deal with it. I realized that many people have some misconceptions about competition.

My advice was “don’t be afraid of competiton.” I learned this lesson when I was running ExchangeHut and talked about it at last year’s Entrepreneurial Deli event in Madison. While we were running ExchangeHut’s trading platform for college students, our biggest fear was that Facebook would launch a marketplace that would crush our competitive advantage. When we heard that Facebook was launching its marketplace, we changed big parts of our strategy to react to the new competition that had yet to launch.

Big mistake. When marketplace first launched, it was fairly useless and was not a competitor to our business. We had changed some of our bigger plans because we were afraid of competition and did not expand as quickly as we had planned because of it. Our competition did not hurt us. My point is that you never know if your competition will actually be successful. If you have a great idea, don’t immediately change your plans if you hear about competition. Execute on your ideas and let the chips fall where they may. If your idea is good and you execute well, you will be successful.

Another point on competition: Don’t be afraid to get in contact with your competition. This isn’t t say that you should tell your competitors (or the world) every last detail of your plans to conquer the world, but you should be on good terms with the other people and companies in your space. We found that it paid off to get to know the other startups that were in our market. We talked to just about everyone in our market.

We even ended up being able to work out some great deals with competition because we were on good terms with them and they knew we existed. There really is no downside to being on good terms with the others in your market. You never know when a great opportunity will present itself to you or one of your competitors that will be beneficial to both of you. Plus, if you plan to start another company, these contacts will be valuable later. If we had been afraid of competition and not talked to them, we would have missed out. Moral of the story: don’t be afraid of competition, get to know them, but don’t tell them everything!

--

--

Nathan Lustig
Nathan Lustig: Staying Out Of The Cubicle

Managing Partner http://www.magmapartners.com LatAm/USA/China. 2x entrepreneur, sports fanatic, travel addict, writing about it at http://nathanlustig.com