| There's no evidence than any of this is true. First market is not often the winner. Facebook came very late to the social media scene but it dominated. Google came very late to the search engine scene, and people don't even remember this but there was a time when there were a ton of search engines and anyone at the time would probably think that the search engine market is saturated and there's no space for a new product. All evidence actually points to better products dominating the market even if they come late. If your competitors released their app 4 months ahead of you but it was full of bugs and always hangs up, and then you release your product which actually works and performs well, people will see your product as a breath of fresh air. Another example is the Chrome browser, which came at a time when Firefox and IE were competing fiercely for market share, and Chrome completely dominated them on the simple basis that it was _really fast_. For most products it doesn't even cost 6 months to make it fast. If you have that as a goal from the very start, there will never be a stage of "omg it's really slow let's try to make it a bit faster". It will always just be fast. |
It isn't that simple - a lot of Chrome's success came because they "made it work" in ways that Firefox (horribly wasteful of CPU, memory, battery life) and IE (shambles in every department) didn't. Also helped in large part by having an enormous web monopoly pushing it and favouring it for their properties.
But you're definitely right that it came after them.