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twinkletwinkle | 8 years ago

They could also call out the flip side though, right? Dropbox could negotiate deals with the ISPs to "box out" smaller competitors. Maybe it costs them upfront but it also solidifies them in the market.

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raverbashing|8 years ago

> Dropbox could negotiate deals with the ISPs to "box out" smaller competitors. Maybe it costs them upfront but it also solidifies them in the market.

Yes, if you're a short sighted MBA that wants to encourage your own extortion

mjburgess|8 years ago

Well, either way, their competitors are icloud/onedrive/googledrive... box'ing-out isnt going to be a successful strategy.

tomrod|8 years ago

This describes a whole lot of business leaders.

maxxxxx|8 years ago

That would be a shrewd business move unless the ISPs want to get into the same business.

Jtsummers|8 years ago

If you don't control the network, though, it remains a risk. Whoever you partner with can renegotiate the terms later or back out of a contract depending on the exit terms (may cost them, but may be worth it for what they can get from Google).

This is the problem of the tenant, the renter. The landlord can change the terms and eat into your profits. At some point it's not worth dealing with them, but it's not always easy to leave.

paulddraper|8 years ago

But renters don't have market share.

If you're Amazon (Dropbox), you have a strong position to negotiate better shipping (network) rates from FedEx and UPS (ISPs).

tomkarlo|8 years ago

Yes, but that's not a "risk factor"... generally in an issuance document, the big pressure is to disclose all the material negatives of your business that you're aware of, partially so that down the road the SEC or your investors can't complain they weren't warned of that risk during the issuance.

smacktoward|8 years ago

The problem here is that the competitors are companies like Google and Microsoft. If it came down to a bidding war, they could outbid Dropbox just by pulling loose change out of their couch cushions.

sbr464|8 years ago

+1, I think it’s sad to have to consider this, but business/capitalism is more of a chess game, especially if the shareholders perspective is the driving decision force.

skinnymuch|8 years ago

Their primary worries for competition though are mostly some of the biggest companies in the world. Not a bright idea for Dropbox at all

conradev|8 years ago

The same move could also be considered defensive, like Netflix, which was essentially forced to do that.