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Unlike dry goods, the frozen food category has high barriers to entry due to the significant logistical complexity and operating leverage required for a cold supply chain. This provides incumbents like Nomad Foods with a durable competitive advantage against new competitors and private label brands.

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Netflix identified video rentals as an ideal market because the return logistics were fundamentally different from standard e-commerce. This complexity made the category unattractive to giants like Amazon, creating a defensible space for Netflix to grow in.

Copycats are inevitable for successful CPG products. The best defense isn't intellectual property, but rapid execution by a team that has 'done it before.' Building a diverse distribution footprint and a strong brand quickly makes it harder for competitors to catch up.

While frozen goods may be your core business, developing a popular, non-frozen 'hero product' is key for scaling a wholesale operation. Shelf-stable items drastically cut shipping costs and logistical complexity, making market expansion more feasible and profitable.

While most tech giants focus on the digital world of "bits," Amazon's true dominance comes from its mastery of the physical world of "atoms." Its massive, hard-to-replicate logistics infrastructure for moving goods creates a formidable competitive advantage that software-only companies cannot challenge.

Persisting with a difficult, authentic, and more expensive production process, like using fresh ingredients instead of flavorings, is not a liability. It is the very thing that builds a long-term competitive advantage and a defensible brand story that copycats cannot easily replicate.

Following lessons from Sam Walton and military history, PriceSmart prioritizes owning real estate and distribution centers. This control over its supply chain is a critical moat that ensures stability, manages costs, and provides a decisive advantage in unpredictable environments.

Scale creates a powerful barrier to entry in logistics. A dominant provider with a vast network can add a new, specific service (like pallets for celery) to its existing operations far more cheaply than a new competitor could build a network for that single service, effectively locking out competition.

The infrastructure to produce daily gummy packs at scale did not exist, forcing Grüns to start with a manual process involving 20 people hand-packing products. This initial, unscalable effort was a necessary step to developing a proprietary, automated supply chain that now serves as a significant competitive moat.

When creating a new food category, you invest heavily in educating consumers. Tariq Farid warns that if you don't control sourcing and maintain healthy margins, a competitor can easily replicate your product, import it cheaply, and capitalize on the demand you built.

While an AI agent could find the cheapest meal, it cannot replicate the dense, optimized network of couriers, merchants, and consumers. DoorDash's defensibility lies in managing the complex, real-world handoffs and operational details, not just the software interface.