There's a lot of businesses that are working hard, who are at the top of their games. Therefore, it's always going to be a market share fight.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The game-playing market today is pretty sizable.
As someone with a deep faith in competition and the market, I also know that markets only work with tough enforcement of the rules that guarantee competition and fair play - and that the pressure to break those rules only gets stronger as the amount of money involved gets larger.
Games are work. There are economies popping up in games now because people value them.
I think in just about any business the low cost competitor is always going to have an advantage.
Games is probably the biggest industry today that has gone really social, right. I mean, the incumbent game companies are really being disrupted and are quickly trying to become social. And you have companies like Zynga.
If you work for Google or Apple, stock options give you a chance to share in the increasing value of the company. In the N.F.L., nothing like this happens; the players, though rich, are just working stiffs like the rest of us.
Organizations are trying to save extra money. Players are trying to get extra money. That's the way it is.
In business, every phase of things counts. Companies that just yell out a low price today to win business aren't going to make money in the long term.
It's competition that forces companies to get out of their complacency.
When you look at a company that's already succeeded or is at the very top of its game, it isn't necessarily when it's executing well. It tends to be peacetime - you've defeated the competition, you have the highest margins, the highest multiple.