Playing Video Games w/ Rachel Kowert. Consumption. Delivery. Profitability.
Drift Signal - A podcast by Nicolas Colin

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The Agenda đ* Rachel Kowert on why we should let children play video games đ§* What becomes of consumption in the Entrepreneurial Age* Everything I ever wrote about the delivery business* Indie.vc is closing shop, but Iâm sure theyâll be back at some pointOur children spend too much time staring at screensâat least, so âtheyâ say. The debates around screens have only intensified in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic. Lockdowns and school closures have contributed to increasing screen time at all ages, adding fuel to parentsâ worries as well as to the debates among researchers.* My first reaction, nonetheless, is skepticism. The debate around screens certainly didnât wait for the pandemic to come to the forefront. Weâve always wondered whether our children arenât passing too much time in front of the TV, too much time in front of the computer, too much time on their phones, too much time playing video games.The same fears even existed prior to the invention of screens. As my wife Laetitia Vitaud notes in her conversation with American research psychologist Rachel Kowert on the Building Bridges podcast, at one point we were saying that some children (and here we can include Laetitiaâs own motherâs experience) were spending too much time reading books, instead of being outside playing with the other kids!Where do these debates come from? These days, theyâre nourished by various articles suggesting a link between time spent playing video games and rising violence in our societies. Another factor are best-sellers by authors such as Nicholas Carr, who ask whether the internet isnât working to make us all a bit stupider. And then, a few years ago people were debating the ways in which some Silicon Valley personalities raise their children. Even if these people owe their fortunes to the time that we all spend looking at the screens theyâve dreamed up and using the apps theyâve developed, it would seem that some forbid their own children from using screens!* But once again, this kind of ârevelationâ left me skeptical. To me, the journalists writing about the subject tended to pass into generalities quite quickly thanks to the anecdotes found in a few particular cases. Before turning the decisions a few billionaires make in banning (so they say) screens for their children into an example to follow, shouldnât we wait to see what happens to those children once theyâve become adults? (And, at any rate, can we really extract many lessons in terms of childhood education when starting from a sample that is in no way representative of the rest of society?)The reality is that there doesnât seem to be any causal link between screens or a lack thereof during childhood and later experiences as an adult. I myself was largely deprived of television when I was a child; we did have a TV set in the house, but besides the fact that it was in black-and-white (the 1980s!), it was shut up in a cupboard, only making an appearance for a few very specific shows.When I later met my wife, she explained to me how she had passed a great deal of time during her childhood and adolescence in front of the TV set. And if we look at her success in terms of schooling and professional life, it would be difficult to draw the conclusion that time spent watching television will be a problem later on! And if I look back on my own experience, Iâd be hard pressed to say that I somehow did better than Laetitia, and certainly not because I was kept far from the TV during my childhood.Beyond that, one essential lesson Iâve seen with my own experience as a parent is that thereâs nothing that makes young children happier than imitating their parents (with the means at their disposal, of course). If the parents spend most of their time in front of a screen, which is the case for both Laetitia and me, then you can easily predict that the children will do the same.Childrenâs mimeticism goes much further, though. A screen doesnât have one single use: we can use it to learn new things, to discover new information, to watch films and TV shows, to talk with friends, to try to gain social clout. This is why itâs important to never underestimate kids: if they see their parents spending lots of time in front of a screen, theyâll want to do the same; but theyâll also imitate their parents and try to spend that time in more or less the same ways. Itâs always a good idea for parents to learn to ignore splashy, alarmist headlines and instead take a clear look at what they themselves are doing: what example are they setting for their kids? And on this specific subject, itâs right to not worry. The serious research on the subject shows that thereâs no link between screen time (for example, playing video games) and individual fulfillment. Thatâs exactly what Rachel Kowert explained in detail with Laetitia in the interview of this episode of Building Bridges.đ Listen to Laetitia and Rachelâs conversation using the player above đ or on Apple Podcasts or Spotify đ§đ The Future of ConsumptionMy Thursday deep dive last week looked at a topic that is a central part of many discussions taking place these days: on the environment and climate change, social justice, the relationship between work and personal lives, and simply the arrival of the new paradigm brought on by the Entrepreneurial Age. Just as production patterns are changing, our consumption patterns, in terms of both goods and services, are also changing quite dramatically.* Using my â11 Notesâ format, I looked at various aspects of what exactly is changing. This includes blurred lines between production and consumption, the shift in power as consumers become part of the multitude, new definitions of quality, and the impact of data that lets consumers better understand their own behavior.The key takeaway for startup founders is that weâre still directly in the middle of a shift that is remaking the entire economy. Changing consumption patterns create a feedback loop that is only becoming more and more powerful, reaching into every corner of our everyday lives. This is also a cautionary tale for any legacy businesses and institutions, who are running out of time to apply the old adage of âAdapt or dieâ. đ Read the details in The Future of Consumption. đ´ââď¸ All About Delivery On Friday, I curated an edition focused on one of the industries that has clearly accelerated during the pandemic: delivery. Restaurants, groceries, e-commerce⌠theyâre all predicated on the very detail-oriented and labor-intensive (for the moment) world of delivery.* My own writings on the subject date back to 2015, and itâll come as no surprise that a large part of that was looking at the development of Amazon. But that really was just the beginning, and not just for new players. While several major retailers have been unable to make the transition to the Entrepreneurial Age, there are also quite a few others, including Target and Best Buy, that are far from giving up in the battle for consumersâ hearts and dollars.One interesting thing to note is that delivery is one of the few areas where a European champion has acquired a major US-based player, with Just Eat Takeawayâs purchase of Grubhub last summer. Having a business grown in Europe win out over one developed in the US is a happy moment indeed, and one that can serve as encouragement for the current and coming generations of European entrepreneurs.đ Discover the implications in last weekâs âFridayâs Digestâ: All About Delivery.đ Funding Profitable BusinessesIt was a sad day in the venture capital world recently when a bold yet obvious experiment in finding different ways to fund businesses, Indie.vc, announced it was closing down. Part of Tim OâReillyâs AlphaTech Ventures, Indie.vc was dedicated to funding businesses that arrived at profitability much earlier than traditional VC-funded companiesâan example that I often cited of how the venture industry was diffracting and experimenting with new ways of investing capital.* Unfortunately, the Indie.vc example seems to be (for the moment) an example of how innovation can run up against obstacles coming from many different directions. In their case, it wasnât a problem relating to returns, per se, but rather reluctance on the part of Indie.vcâs own limited partners to have exposure to those kinds of businesses rather than more traditional VC-compatible companies. Put simply, institutional LPs werenât enthusiastic about steady smaller profits when compared to the possibility of exponential returns.I do wonder, however, if this isnât more of a pause for Indie.vc (or other efforts following a similar path) rather than a complete cancellation. After all, the wildly hot markets, both public and private, that investors are currently enjoying when it comes to tech companies will, at some point, cool off. And at that point the lessons learned by Tim, Bryce and the rest of the team at Indie.vc could prove quite attractive indeed.đ Get more details on how it all happened in Funding Profitable Businesses. Sounds interesting? Subscribe to European Straits and let me know what you think!đš Want to dig deeper into video games? Read my wife Laetitia Vitaudâs latest edition of Laetitia@Work, published last Thursday: Video Games: my new frontier?Also have a look at my colleague Younès Rharbaouiâs excellent edition of Chasing Paper on the topic: 10 Thoughts on the Gaming Industry đŽ (June 2020) đŤđˇ Youâd rather listen to our (=Laetitia and I) conversations in French? Give the latest editions of Nouveau DĂŠpart dedicated to Tout comprendre sur la crise au Texas đ¤ Notre nouveau projet : "La Flamme et le vent" đĽ Vaccins : pourquoi les Ătats-Unis vont-ils si vite ? đa try.đ My latest contribution to my firm The Familyâs newsletter is about the impossibility of knowing if your business will be scalable or not at the early stage. Have a look: The quest for scale.đŚđŚđŚ˘ Finally, donât miss the latest installments of The Familyâs newsletter:* Vote for entrepreneurs! (Alice Zagury)* The explosion of weirdness (Mathias Pastor)* The rise of the software conglomerates (Balthazar de Lavergne)* Thinking patterns (Oussama Ammar)   All recent editions:* Funding Profitable Businessesâfor subscribers only.* All About Deliveryâfor subscribers only.* The Future of Consumptionâfor subscribers only.* More About SPACs. The 'K-Shaped' Recovery. Crypto Digest. A Tribute to Texas.âfor everyone.* We All Need a Lone Star Stateâfor subscribers only.* All About Cryptoâfor subscribers only.* How Governments Can Deal With the 'K-Shaped' Recoveryâfor subscribers only.* Europe & Silicon Valley w/ Toni Cowan-Brown. Capital Call. AI. International Expansion. Consumer Goods.âfor everyone.* Some Quick Notes on SPACsâfor subscribers only.* Vaughn Tan on Uncertaintyâfor subscribers only.European Straits is a 5-email-a-week product, and all essays are subscriber-only (with rare exceptions). Join us!From Munich, Germany đŠđŞÂ Nicolas This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.driftsignal.com