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In 2014, Peter Thiel gave a 1-hour masterclass on how to build a monopoly from scratch. He broke down how: • Google became untouchable • PayPal beat the odds • Facebook crushed competition Here are 11 timeless lessons from his masterclass: 1. Create value, then capture it

A valuable business must: • Create X dollars of value • Capture Y% of that value Most people assume X and Y are linked. They’re not. You can create enormous value and capture almost none. You can create modest value and capture most of it. Monopolies excel at both

2. Profits matter more than size Airlines generate more revenue than Google. But over 100 years, U.S. airlines have roughly zero cumulative profit. Google makes money. Lots of it. Value isn’t defined by size. It’s defined by: profits + longevity.

3. Perfect competition destroys value Perfect competition looks efficient in textbooks. In real life: • No differentiation • No pricing power • No profits If you’re fighting for the same reasons as everyone else, you’re not creating value. You’re just competing.

4. There are only two kinds of businesses According to Thiel: • Perfectly competitive businesses • Monopolies And almost nothing in between. Stable, profitable companies are monopolies. Struggling, margin‑less ones are competitive. That’s the fundamental binary in business.

5. People lie about competition Non‑monopolists pretend their market is special and small → to attract investment. Monopolists pretend they’re in huge competitive markets → to avoid regulation. The difference in narrative is subtle. The difference in economics is massive.

6. Small markets are powerful footholds Start with a small market you can dominate. Then expand outward in concentric circles: • Amazon → started with books • eBay → started with collectibles • Facebook → started at Harvard • PayPal → focused on eBay power‑sellers Successful companies don’t start in massive markets. They start small, but with the potential to grow.

7. Breakthroughs aren’t incremental To monopolize, you need: → 10× improvement than alternatives PayPal processed payments 10× faster than checks. Amazon offered 10× more selection than bookstores. Incremental improvements rarely win. Quantum leaps do.

8. Monopoly characteristics stack Powerful businesses combine: • Proprietary technology • Network effects • Economies of scale • Branding One alone helps. All four? You’re no longer competing, you’re dominating.

9. The “last mover” matters more than the first mover First movers get attention. Last movers make the real money. Microsoft wasn’t the first OS; it became the standard. Google wasn’t the first search engine; it became the dominant one. Facebook wasn’t the first social network; it became the primary one. Value lives in the future, not the past.

10. Most of your value lies decades ahead Thiel did DCF analysis on early PayPal. • ~75% of the company’s value came from 10+ years in the future. Growth today looks real. Durability tomorrow defines worth. The future is where wealth is made.

11. Competition crowds out meaningful work Competition teaches you to imitate. But imitation yields no value capture. Thiel argues: When everyone does the same thing, no one wins. In biology, sports, and business: Competition rewards skill at competing, not original value creation. Losers compete. Winners create.

Final takeaway: Monopoly isn’t evil. It’s the economic strategy that: • Creates real value • Captures advantage • Sustains over time Thiel’s point isn’t just “monopoly is good.” It’s that competition eats your profits, energy, and identity. And the companies that win aren’t better at competing. They’re better at being different.

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