Domino's became a top-performing stock not by having the best pizza, but by focusing on convenience through technology. Their app created a direct customer relationship, enabling better targeting and a smoother experience. This tech advantage transitioned into a physical world distribution and scale advantage.

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As AI and no-code tools make software easier to build, technological advantage is no longer a defensible moat. The most successful companies now win through unique distribution advantages, such as founder-led content or deep community building. Go-to-market strategy has surpassed product as the key differentiator.

The best tech investments for non-specialists are often disguised consumer companies that use technology for scale, not for core R&D. Uber is a logistics business and Reddit is an ad business. This simplifies analysis away from complex technology to understandable consumer behavior.

While competitors viewed capital as a strategic weapon, DoorDash focused on capital efficiency. Their goal was to be twice as effective with every dollar spent on customer acquisition. Lin emphasizes that capital is fuel, but it's useless without a 'fire burning'—a product with real engagement.

The personal computing revolution was ignited not by the Apple II computer itself, but by VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet program. This demonstrated a crucial market lesson: a single, indispensable piece of software (a 'killer app') can create the demand for an entire hardware platform.

Obsessing over creating a new market category is often a mistake. Data shows the vast majority of successful public tech companies compete within established categories. It's more effective to get "invited to the party" by using a known category label and then winning with a sharp, differentiated value proposition.

The market often misjudges companies like DoorDash by focusing on the high-level service (food delivery) while missing the massive, compounding value created by its obsessive focus on fine-grained logistical details. These small, chained-together improvements create a powerful, hard-to-replicate moat over time.

Instead of focusing solely on new promotions, Tim Hortons achieved 17 quarters of growth by fundamentally improving its core offerings, like adding more apples to its apple fritter and ensuring coffee consistency. This builds a solid foundation for future expansion into new categories.

In today's volatile market, speed and agility have replaced sheer size as the primary competitive advantage. As stated by Rupert Murdoch, it's 'the fast beating the slow.' Startups often win by rapidly responding to customer needs, allowing them to outmaneuver slower, larger incumbents.

While massive "kingmaking" funding rounds can accelerate growth, they don't guarantee victory. A superior product can still triumph over a capital-rich but less-efficient competitor, as seen in the DoorDash vs. Uber Eats battle. Capital can create inefficiency and unforced errors.

New technology like AI doesn't automatically displace incumbents. Established players like DoorDash and Google successfully defend their turf by leveraging deep-rooted network effects (e.g., restaurant relationships, user habits). They can adopt or build competing tech, while challengers struggle to replicate the established ecosystem.