Cultural Influences on Financial Decisions
February 12, 2025
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Profitability was always the core reason behind the existence of a company. For many businesses it still is. There is no way that businesses could continue to exist in the yesteryears without generating adequate profits. Only government companies could continue to make losses in the long run. As far as private companies were concerned, the moment they started making losses, they were on probation. They had to turn around the business to become profitable with immediate effect or lose investor funding.
This has changed in the 21st century. The information age has brought along with itself a very different business model. Companies like Facebook. Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram and Snapchat have generated profits very late. However, their shares not worthless during the years when they were making a loss. These companies were valued at billions even though they were losing millions each year.
In this article, we will understand how the tech industry survives on this delayed profitability model.
The business that existed in the twentieth century and the early twenty-first century were all industrial businesses. This meant that mass production enabled them. One of the fundamental economic laws governing these businesses was the law of diminishing marginal utility. This meant that every additional unit produced would have lesser and lesser value to the consumers. Hence as the supply increased in the market, the value of each other unit would fall.
However, this is not the case with new age companies. These companies actually benefit when more and more users start adopting the product. Every individual user that logs into Facebook makes it more valuable. Similarly, every new user that starts using Snapchat makes it more valuable for everyone else and the company itself.
The tech industry would therefore not be able to create value if it immediately started charging money. For these companies to gain traction, they have to build some sort of critical mass. For instance, once Facebook acquired a critical mass (let’s say 50 million users), more and more people had to automatically join in so that they could connect with those 50 million users. This is the point where revenue generation makes sense. Had Facebook tried to generate revenue when they had 50 users, the whole business model would have failed.
However, not every company can adopt the strategies of Facebook or its peers. This is because these companies had convinced their investors that they are in for the long haul. They would not accept money from any and every investor. They would ensure that investors had a vision regarding the future of their company which was similar to the view of the founders.
There are several of these tech companies that have valued growth over the redistribution of profits. Consider the case of Amazon for example. The company has existed for 23 years. However, since its formation in 1994, the company has never paid out a single dollar as dividends. The company believes so strongly in its growth story that it invests each dollar earned back into the business. Amazon is not the only one. Several tech companies do this. This would be unacceptable to traditional investors. However, this strategy has paid off as Amazon has grown from a small time startup to one of the top 20 companies in the world.
Delaying profits is not always the right thing to do. There have been some instances where delaying profitability has gone horribly wrong. The common causes of this are as follows:
The problem with losing money with each sale is that it is a “lose-lose” proposition. Each market participant tries to outspend their competition. The result is that several of them go broke. The ones surviving also have very poor financial health and are prone to more price wars from newcomers.
Delaying profitability is therefore not a substitute for having a well thought out business model that provides value to customers. It is just a strategy that can be used to augment businesses that already provide value to customers.
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