Bloomberg
After a years-long drought, a wave of technology startups — Uber, Lyft, Pinterest and more — are going public, evidence that the sector is thriving. But there’s a shadow hanging over almost all of them.
Seventeen of the 22 tech initial public offerings that aimed to raise $100 million or more in the last 18 months mention Amazon.com Inc or Google — and sometimes both — as a competitor or risk to their business. Many, like cyber security software maker Tenable Holdings Inc, are operationally dependent on Amazon’s cloud. Others, like photo collection site Pinterest Inc, compete directly with one of the giants, in this case Google’s image search.
Critics including US Democratic presidential candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren say big tech companies have created a “kill zone†that prevents startups from getting past a certain size without being bought or pushed out of business.
But filings from newly public tech startups suggest a more nuanced picture is emerging: Companies can escape the “kill zone,†but if they do, they’re likely beholden to the tech giants in other ways.
Consider Lyft Inc. The ride-sharing company needs to get people to download its app, so it turns to the biggest advertising system in the world — Alphabet Inc’s Google. In 2018 alone, Lyft spent more than $90 million on Google ads. Those ads sent people to Google and Apple-owned app stores. When they open the app, the map they see inside is driven by Google technology, which Lyft also pays for. Much of Lyft’s systems run on Amazon’s cloud — to the tune of $300 million in fees through 2021. Moreover, Google owns more than
5 percent of Lyft through its investing arm Capital G. It even has a board seat.
“Some of our competitors or technology partners may take actions which disrupt the interoperability of our platform with their own products or services,†Lyft said in a filing. “We expect the types and levels of competition to increase.â€
It’s true that big tech companies helped create the current wave of startups. Cloud providers like Amazon Web Services make it possible for businesses to grow quickly without having to build their own server farms. Google and Facebook Inc enable companies to target and likely customers. But as the tech giants expand and enter new markets, they’re increasingly disrupting smaller businesses they may have helped foster.
Fastly Inc, which specialises in a niche type of cloud computing, has benefited from distribution partnerships with Google and Amazon, helping it raise more than $180 million in its May IPO. But now, as Google and Amazon expand their cloud offerings, they’re beginning to compete with Fastly directly, the company said in a filing. Chewy Inc, the online pet food and supplies site, uses Amazon’s cloud but has viewed the e-commerce giant as a rival ever since Amazon started its own pet products brand last year.
The tech giants have the power to change their services at any time, generating havoc downstream. For years, Pinterest nabbed free traffic straight from Google searches. But in early 2018, Google made a tweak that meant Pinterest image pages didn’t show up in search results, hurting online traffic and slowing user growth in the months that followed.
“Our ability to maintain and increase the number of visitors directed to our service from search engines is not within our control,†Pinterest said. “Search engines may modify their search algorithms and policies or enforce those policies in ways that are detrimental to us.