Tobi the hedgehog
In his 2001 classic “Good to Great,” author Jim Collins borrows from an ancient Greek metaphor to describe two types of entrepreneurs: the fox, who is good at many things, and the hedgehog, who is the best at one thing. “To go from good to great requires transcending the curse of competence,” Collins wrote in an essay expanding on the hedgehog concept. “It requires the discipline to say, ‘Just because we are good at it—just because we’re making money and generating growth—doesn’t necessarily mean we can become the best at it.'” I thought about that mental model while reading this engrossing Brad Stone profile of the hedgehog Tobi Lütke, Shopify’s founder and CEO. Lütke, to me, is one of those idiosyncratic and demonstrably brilliant entrepreneurs who had not just the audacity to take on the fiercest of rivals—Jeff Bezos and Amazon—but the resolve and intense focus to make the strategy successful. One concept that surfaced during this interview that I found especially provocative was Lütke’s approach to chaos engineering; the notion that intentionally introducing failures into an organization can be a mechanism to actually make companies more resilient. (As a matter of disclosure, we are long-term shareholders of both AMZN and SHOP.)
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The cascading effects of a global logistics meltdown
“The supply chain is like your car,” Hamid Moghadam, chair of Prologis, said this week in a sprawling FT piece on the pandemic-era changes unfolding across the global logistics industry. “If it runs, you don’t give it much thought. But when it breaks down, you sure know the difference.” Global supply chains have, to put it mildly, suffered from significant disruptions over the past year; what’s interesting to me is how certain organization’s logistics strategies may have permanently shifted in post-pandemic world. This shift has created all sorts of complex second and third-order effects, as global goods, manufacturing centers—and even capital—gets re-routed across the globe.
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Learn from your mentors; don’t become them
My friend Alex Morris has a thoughtful essay this week that grapples with the concept of developing one’s own “investment identity” in an industry that often incentivizes groupthink. I very much believe that true investors are artists: We may borrow ideas learned from the greats and from our mentors, but to become great artists ourselves, we must develop our own vision—even when that vision may be perceived, by some, as crazy.
A few more links I enjoyed:
PS – Part 2 of my conversation with Matt Smith and Emmet Peppers went live recently. We go deep on Tesla Energy and the future of renewables. Link here.
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