Zero to One: Notes on Startups, or How to Build the Future



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possibly
get cheaper or cleaner in the future. But they did. By 2013, shale gas
accounted for 34% of America’s natural gas, and gas prices had fallen more than 70%
since 2008, devastating most renewable energy business models. Fracking may not be a
durable energy solution, either, but it was enough to doom cleantech companies that
didn’t see it coming.


THE SECRET QUESTION
Every cleantech company justified itself with conventional truths about the need for a
cleaner world. They deluded themselves into believing that an overwhelming social need
for alternative energy solutions implied an overwhelming business opportunity for
cleantech companies of all kinds. Consider how conventional it had become by 2006 to
be bullish on solar. That year, President George W. Bush heralded a future of “solar
roofs that will enable the American family to be able to generate their own electricity.”
Investor and cleantech executive Bill Gross declared that the “potential for solar is
enormous.” Suvi Sharma, then-CEO of solar manufacturer Solaria, admitted that while
“there is a gold rush feeling” to solar, “there’s also real gold here—or, in our case,
sunshine.” But rushing to embrace the convention sent scores of solar panel companies
—Q-Cells, Evergreen Solar, SpectraWatt, and even Gross’s own Energy Innovations, to
name just a few—from promising beginnings to bankruptcy court very quickly. Each of
the casualties had described their bright futures using broad conventions on which
everybody agreed. Great companies have secrets: specific reasons for success that other
people don’t see.


THE MYTH OF SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Cleantech entrepreneurs aimed for more than just success as most businesses define it.
The cleantech bubble was the biggest phenomenon—and the biggest flop—in the history
of “social entrepreneurship.” This philanthropic approach to business starts with the idea
that corporations and nonprofits have until now been polar opposites: corporations have
great power, but they’re shackled to the profit motive; nonprofits pursue the public
interest, but they’re weak players in the wider economy. Social entrepreneurs aim to
combine the best of both worlds and “do well by doing good.” Usually they end up doing
neither.
The ambiguity between social and financial goals doesn’t help. But the ambiguity in
the word “social” is even more of a problem: if something is “socially good,” is it good
for
society, or merely 
seen
as good 
by
society? Whatever is good enough to receive
applause from all audiences can only be conventional, like the general idea of green
energy.
Progress isn’t held back by some difference between corporate greed and nonprofit
goodness; instead, we’re held back by the sameness of both. Just as corporations tend to
copy each other, nonprofits all tend to push the same priorities. Cleantech shows the
result: hundreds of undifferentiated products all in the name of one overbroad goal.
Doing something 
different
is what’s truly good for society—and it’s also what allows
a business to profit by monopolizing a new market. The best projects are likely to be
overlooked, not trumpeted by a crowd; the best problems to work on are often the ones
nobody else even tries to solve.


TESLA: 7 FOR 7
Tesla is one of the few cleantech companies started last decade to be thriving today.
They rode the social buzz of cleantech better than anyone, but they got the seven
questions right, so their success is instructive:
TECHNOLOGY.
Tesla’s technology is so good that other car companies rely on it: Daimler
uses Tesla’s battery packs; Mercedes-Benz uses a Tesla powertrain; Toyota uses a
Tesla motor. General Motors has even created a task force to track Tesla’s next
moves. But Tesla’s greatest technological achievement isn’t any single part or
component, but rather its ability to integrate many components into one superior
product. The Tesla Model S sedan, elegantly designed from end to end, is more than
the sum of its parts: 

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