How to Think About Economic Moats When Starting a BusinessJust like in a medieval fortress, an economic moat will keep competitors out by creating barriers.

By每Bylund

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Mike Matthews Photography | Getty Images

Warren Buffett从奥马哈,投资甲骨文,著名的样子for businesses with "moats" that can all but guarantee returns over time. As investors' returns are taken from a firm's profits, finding and establishing a moat would appear to be universally good advice in business. So can entrepreneurs gain from thinking about moats for their startups?

Related:8 Financial Tips for Entrepreneurs Launching a Startup

A moat, according toInvestopedia, is a "business' ability to maintain competitive advantages over its competitors in order to protect its long-term profits and market share from competing firms." Indeed, an economic moat, just like the medieval fortress original, keeps competitors out by raising barriers that lessen threats and make take-overs more difficult. A moat is a defensive measure that allows a firm to retain a leadership position and increase margins.

Profits and inefficiency

Economists refer to such margins as "monopoly profits," since they are earned because of competitive imperfections. They would disappear in perfectly competitive markets, so economic efficiency is largely synonymous with zero economic profits.

That cannot be a goal for the individual firm, however. While zero profit means the business breaks even, this is no incentive for investing or going through the trouble of starting and running a business. Instead, asMichael Porter recognized, firms formulate strategies to set themselves apart and earn profits. Consequently, they earn profits from creating and exploiting economic inefficiencies.

Related:To Beat the Competition, Become the Most Convenient Option for Customers

A moat, simply put, is the firm's achieved ability to protect that economic inefficiency that allows it to generate and earn profits. A firm that doesn't have one should consider whether and how to create one.

In this sense, moats should perhaps be also on the entrepreneur's radar. They should not be an afterthought in any business, but should also not be a first priority in the startup. After all, one cannot defend what does not yet exist. So unless you already have a fortress, a moat will do you no good. Yet if you build a fortress, it makes sense to build it where you can also create a moat. As Buffett's investment strategy shows, a fortress without a moat is harder to defend.

Creating value can be your economic moat

For the startup, it should not be a choice whether to build a fortress or the moat. Rather, the fortress and moat should both be in the blueprint -- and the former should generate the latter. Successful entrepreneurship is, in a sense, about building a fortress in a shallow lake, thus creating a moat as a result of building the fortress.

Entrepreneurs should focus oncreatingnew valuethrough their startups, meaning they offer consumers something they have not been offered before. While this introduces economic inefficiency, at least to economists, it is not an inefficiency in your own business. Instead, by creating new value, your startup reveals to consumers the relative inefficiency of competitors.

Related:Don't Be Intimidated By Giants in Your Market. Use These Strategies to Figure Out Who Your Real Competition Is.

Here are three ways to think about creating value in your startup:

1.Make value your strategy.Real value is in the eyes of your customers, sothink of them first. If your startup can do a better job providing customers with value than competitors, then asking them to pay a premium should not be an issue. That is your moat: you can charge higher prices for even higher value.

2. Create your competitors' inefficiency.This does not mean sabotaging your competitors. Your startup should aim to outdo them by doing things differently or doing different things -- or for different customers. The difference between the new value you create and the "old' value offered by competitors is your source of profits as well as your advantage.

3. Staying ahead requires no defense.If you can score more effectively than your opponent, winning doesn't depend on playing defense. This is is true in sports as well as in your startup. But it is also true that the best defense in the world will not win any games unless you can also score. So think offense first. If you do it well enough, your ability to create more value than competitors is your moat.

Related:Shh! Keep Your Big Goals to Yourself.

While Warren Buffett is right to look for investment opportunities with moats, this applies to businesses in existing competitive markets. Leaders in "red ocean" markets will see their profits fall to the industry standard or even zero unless they can protect themselves from the competition. For stagnated industries, this is defensive game -- it is about erecting barriers and digging moats.

But for industries that are not stagnant, where there is progress and innovation, what matters more is offense: to create new value. Without the ability to create value, no moat in the world can save your business. Entrepreneurs are better off playing offense and learning to do it well.

每Bylund

Associate Professor of Entrepreneurship

每Bylund, PhD, is associate professor of entrepreneurship and Johnny D Pope Chair and Records-Johnston professor in the School of Entrepreneurship at Oklahoma State University. His areas of research are entrepreneurship, management and economic organization. He is author and editor of six books.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Business News

McDonald's Employee Shoots, Kills 30-Year-Old Woman Following Dispute: 'Completely Senseless'

The victim has been identified as Jacklyn Marie Reed from Johnson City, Tennessee.

Business Ideas

This Retiree's Yummy Hobby Is Now a Remote Side Hustle That Makes $250 an Hour: 'I Attached My Bank Account And the Money Just Flowed Automatically'

Since 1972, in his downtime, Bill Reichman has been dedicated to one delicious diversion. When the pandemic hit, he turned his passion into a lucrative side hustle. Here's how he did it.

Business News

An Anonymous Man Bought 250 Plane Tickets for IDF Reservists Headed to Israel

The man purchased tickets for anyone who showed him an IDF call-up notice at JFK.

Business News

Costco Shoppers' Personal Data May Have Been Compromised and Sent to Meta, New Lawsuit Alleges

The class-action lawsuit may affect those who have used the online Costco Pharmacy.

Business News

Google Hopes Traditional Passwords Will Eventually Be 'Obsolete.' Here's What It's Using Instead.

The tech giant announced it will begin offering "passkeys" as a default option instead of passwords.