Another way to look at it is how we got to simple tools to beginwith: tech-driven industry disruptions. A wave of sw replacement came for tools that are mobile-friendly and support collaboration, like Google docs & spreadsheets, and Figma. Mobile & live collaboration are so important that feature-poor versions of older tools ate giant market share from Microsoft Office, which is 15% of Microsoft's revenue, and the same at Adobe and others.
But Office, Adobe, and friends built up all those features for market-driven competitive reasons. Startups in new spaces get head starts of 2-3 years in consumer, and then maybe a couple more if b2b, but that's it. It doesn't last forever: capital is a moat, and part of that is by building a feature factory, which massive companies like to do. MS and Adobe went SaaS and mobile a few years ago, and they're actively competing here now.
Another way to look at it is how we got to simple tools to beginwith: tech-driven industry disruptions. A wave of sw replacement came for tools that are mobile-friendly and support collaboration, like Google docs & spreadsheets, and Figma. Mobile & live collaboration are so important that feature-poor versions of older tools ate giant market share from Microsoft Office, which is 15% of Microsoft's revenue, and the same at Adobe and others.
But Office, Adobe, and friends built up all those features for market-driven competitive reasons. Startups in new spaces get head starts of 2-3 years in consumer, and then maybe a couple more if b2b, but that's it. It doesn't last forever: capital is a moat, and part of that is by building a feature factory, which massive companies like to do. MS and Adobe went SaaS and mobile a few years ago, and they're actively competing here now.