In 2014, Elon Musk shocked everyone.
He gave away Tesla's EV patents for free.
Wouldn’t that help Tesla’s competitors?
But Musk didn’t see it that way.
At the time, EVs made up less than 1% of global car sales.
Musk knew Tesla couldn’t win this fight alone.
“If we clear a path to create compelling electric vehicles but then lay intellectual property landmines behind us to inhibit others, we are acting in a manner contrary to that goal,” he said.
By sharing Tesla’s patents, Musk invited competitors to expand the EV market together.
The gamble worked.
Rivals like Ford, GM, and Rivian grew the EV space, creating more demand for batteries, charging stations, and green tech.
And Tesla? Positioned as the pioneer.
Revenue skyrocketed.
Tesla became the most valuable automaker in history, worth $800 billion.
And EVs now make up over 14% of global car sales.
The lesson?
Good founders avoid competition.
Great founders use competitors to get ahead.
P.S. Many founders fear competitors and it’s holding them back.
方外居士
2024-12-23 12:40:21把饼做大了大家都有饭吃。eco-environment要众多的不同环节的参与者才能建起来。