When a Home Depot store became too successful and couldn't handle more volume, the company's solution was to open another one nearby. This self-cannibalization strategy allowed them to capture total market share, ensuring customers bought from a Home Depot, even if it meant stealing from an existing location.

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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.

The Froyo industry's previous decline wasn't due to a lack of demand, but a surplus of supply. The business model—low-cost self-serve machines and minimal labor needs—was so attractive and easy to replicate that it led to oversaturation. The industry essentially became a victim of its own success.

Established industries often operate like cartels with unwritten rules, such as avoiding aggressive marketing. New entrants gain a significant edge by deliberately violating these norms, forcing incumbents to react to a game they don't want to play. This creates differentiation beyond the core product or service.

Sears' decline was epitomized by a CEO who felt like a "stranger" in his own stores and pursued abstract corporate strategies. In contrast, Home Depot mandated that every executive spend time on the floor, ensuring that strategic decisions were grounded in the reality of the customer experience.

Home Depot succeeded by "counter-positioning" against incumbents like Sears. Their high-volume, low-price model was so different that if Sears tried to adopt it, they would have damaged their existing high-margin business. This strategic dilemma paralyzed competitors, allowing Home Depot to capture the market.

Home Depot's decentralized model gives regional presidents significant autonomy but with clear, unspoken boundaries—the "invisible fence." This fosters local ownership and agility while ensuring alignment with core company principles. Crossing the line results in a "zap," maintaining strategic cohesion without micromanagement.

A few dominant consumer platforms are capturing the majority of retail sales, creating a winner-take-all market. These companies leverage their scale and cash flow to reinvest in technology and advertising, widening their competitive moats much like the largest tech companies.

Home Depot became the default shopping destination for so many customers that manufacturers faced a choice: sell through Home Depot or lose access to consumers who wouldn't seek them elsewhere. This created a powerful network effect where scale attracted key suppliers, which reinforced customer loyalty and solidified their market dominance.

After the problematic Bowwater acquisition, Home Depot's founders realized their growth ambitions were outpacing operational capacity. In an act of self-regulation, they asked their board to pass a resolution capping annual growth at 25%, using their governance structure to enforce discipline and prevent future mistakes.

Top compounders intentionally target and dominate small, slow-growing niche markets. These markets are unattractive to large private equity firms, allowing the compounder to build a durable competitive advantage and pricing power with little interference from deep-pocketed rivals.