Are cheap prices and the ability to commit large resources all that matter?
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The rush to connect Jane and John Citizen to the Internet is well
under way. Who will strike gold, and who will end up with a pan of
wet sand? One day the major on-line services are declared dinosaurs,
facing extinction at the hand of nimbler, cheaper Internet Service
Providers (ISPs). The next day, the ISPs themselves find investors
fleeing their stocks as Ma Bell weighs in with WorldNet. What's a poor
Wall Streeter to do? Are cheap prices (currently favoring ISPs, and
potentially favoring anyone with deep pockets) and the ability to
commit large resources (favoring AT&T and other large telcos) all that
matter? Based on ongoing research conducted by the HERMES project at
the University of Michigan Business School, I identify some
fundamental technical abilities and related business skills that
can be a counterbalance for large resources and cheap prices. In
fact, these will be the essential skills required of any company
hoping for long-term profitability as an on-ramp intermediary. If you
see a company mastering these, invest and hold. If you see them
falling behind, prepare for price cutting, wasteful spending,
underperformance, and demise.
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