I immediately thought of the last footnote (and accompanying text) of Growth.
But acquirers have an additional reason to want startups. A rapidly growing company is not merely valuable, but dangerous. If it keeps expanding, it might expand into the acquirer’s own territory. Most product acquisitions have some component of fear. Even if an acquirer isn’t threatened by the startup itself, they might be alarmed at the thought of what a competitor could do with it. And because startups are in this sense doubly valuable to acquirers, acquirers will often pay more than an ordinary investor would. [14]
[14] I once explained this to some founders who had recently arrived from Russia. They found it novel that if you threatened a company they’d pay a premium for you. “In Russia they just kill you,” they said, and they were only partly joking.
Yes that’s indeed a big part of it, and there are other issues to consider as well:
smallCo’s product may be directly competing against a product that BigCorp has invested a lot of money in; pursuing smallCo’s product seriously could imply abandoning that large investment.
By taking over the product and having it fail, BigCorp can try to make it look as if the product was destined to fail all along, justifying to investors why it wasn’t the first to produce that product.
I immediately thought of the last footnote (and accompanying text) of Growth.
Yes that’s indeed a big part of it, and there are other issues to consider as well:
smallCo’s product may be directly competing against a product that BigCorp has invested a lot of money in; pursuing smallCo’s product seriously could imply abandoning that large investment.
By taking over the product and having it fail, BigCorp can try to make it look as if the product was destined to fail all along, justifying to investors why it wasn’t the first to produce that product.