Strengthening Your Competitive Moat: Long-Term Strategies for Startup Success
According to McKinsey & Company, the top 20% companies capture nearly 90% of economic profits. Their average profit is 30 times that of the next 60% of the companies. This wide gap is not just luck. It is the result of deliberately constructed and actively maintained competitive moats.
People often mistakenly assume that moats are unassailable, everlasting assets earned by category-defining firms. However, history says otherwise.
Kodak invented the digital camera, yet could not pivot away from film. Nokia dominated mobile phones for years before losing its grip to ecosystems it failed to build. Blockbuster had scale and brand recognition that Netflix dismantled one algorithm at a time. Amazon tells the other side of the story. Its competitive position was assembled over decades by rolling out membership plans, programs that enabled anyone to become a third-party seller, and by continuously improving its logistics.
Each case illustrates the same lesson. A moat is a living structure that erodes without reinvestment.
For startups, understanding which moats to build and how to deepen them is one of the most consequential questions a founder can ask.

The Anatomy of Competitive Moats and What It Takes to Make Them Last
What makes one business impenetrable may be largely irrelevant to another. That’s why the critical first step is identifying which moat type your business is likely to generate.

Switching Costs: Making It Harder to Leave Than to Stay
Switching costs create a moat by raising the price a customer pays to switch to a competitor. This ‘price’ is paid not in money, but in time, effort, and perceived risk. The primary payoff of switching costs is demand stability.
If your product has high switching costs, your rivals will need to provide additional benefits that far outweigh switching costs. When such a moat exists, your customer retention will improve without any increase in sales expenditure.
Types of switching costs
Switching costs manifest in several ways.
- Learning curves make products deeply embedded in users’ workflows and muscle memory.
- Migration complexity deters enterprises that have spent months integrating a platform into their tech stack.
- Accumulated history, such as years of personalized data or earned loyalty perks, creates powerful psychological inertia.
- In regulated industries, the compliance risk of adopting unfamiliar tools adds an additional structural layer of lock-in.
How to make switching costs more effective?
Pursue depth of integration rather than breadth of features.
For instance, suppose your organization has a significant number of procedures, logs, and project management data recorded in an all-in-one workspace like Notion. Then, migrating to a new digital workspace will be excruciatingly difficult if Notion’s competitors do not offer white-gloved onboarding, which can be a significant cost for them.
What really drives this switching cost is the different types of critical data that can be easily recorded, accessed, and analyzed on Notion.
Network Effects: Compounding Value with Every New User
A product benefits from network effects when its value increases as more people use it. This is a dynamic most commonly found in platforms built for connection or collaboration. The payoff is typically a price premium alongside accelerating demand.
Unless your competitors keep up with your adoption rate, they will automatically fall out of the race, no matter how well-funded they are.
Types of network effects
- Direct network effects occur when users benefit from other users, like on LinkedIn or WhatsApp.
- Indirect effects emerge when a larger user base attracts a complementary group of participants.
- Data network effects, which are extremely relevant in AI-native products, occur when greater usage produces better model outputs, which in turn attract more users in a self-reinforcing loop.
How to strengthen network effects?
The obvious move is creating more value for your highest-LTV users acquired through organic routes. You should never underestimate the word-of-mouth marketing that such users provide. However, the key lies in engagement design.
A network-dependent product that people join but rarely use has weak demand stability. So, you will need to invest in things like in-app walkthroughs, gamification of key actions to build habits, UI improvements, trimming user journeys, and personalization.
Scale Advantages: Turning Size into a Structural Barrier
Scale advantages work differently from the previous two moat types.
Rather than making customers reluctant to leave, scale makes it impossible for competitors to match your unit economics. As output volume increases, fixed costs are distributed across more units. At the same time, you will have more bargaining power with sellers. Your scale of operations will also enable aggressive R&D investments that smaller rivals simply cannot afford.
Types of scale advantages
- In manufacturing, higher output drives per-unit cost reductions.
- In logistics, route density lowers delivery costs.
- In data-intensive businesses, larger datasets produce superior outputs that compound in value with each new user.
- Distribution scale is another form of moat where companies with established customer relationships can launch new products at a fraction of the acquisition cost a new entrant would bear.
How to maintain the scale advantage?
Maintaining scale advantage depends entirely on operational discipline. Companies that scale headcount, infrastructure, or inventory without building efficient underlying processes often find their costs outpacing revenue. This erodes the very advantage they set out to create.
Eqvista- Quantifying the Value Behind Your Competitive Edge!
A competitive moat is a key driver of your company’s valuation. An accurate and well-documented valuation translates the intangible strength of your market position into a language that investors understand and respect. Such reports can be useful when you are preparing for a funding round, issuing equity compensation to the team that is building your advantage, or simply benchmarking progress against peers.
Eqvista’s research-backed valuation reports help founders and investors understand the true economic value of the advantages they have built and those still in development.
With over $5 billion in client assets evaluated each month, we bring the depth and rigor that sophisticated investors have come to expect.
Contact us today to learn how we can help you put a precise number to your competitive edge!
