In 2006, the phone was still something new and budding – a far cry from the amazing device we hold in our hands every day. All you could really do was take a phone call or send and receive an exceptional text message. The first iPhone wasn’t even out yet – no high-resolution cameras and definitely no high-speed internet on mobile phones. Even the net was relatively young. It hadn’t gained the kind of ground it has gained today. The first version of Google Maps was rolled out and MySpace was still the leading social media network in the world.
Blackberry and Nokia were the top-selling smartphones and Digg was the most popular social news site. The first tweet was sent on Twitter, Google purchased YouTube, which was still growing up and in terms of user experience, nothing was quite as extreme as what we have today. Overall, they were simple times, and everyone was pretty comfortable with how ‘well-developed’ everything was.
A year later, the first iPhone was launched and the whole world literally went berserk. Apple Inc faced unprecedented growth and out of the blue, more and more companies followed suit. Technology moved so fast a mere ten years seem like two decades had passed. Those ten years saw the growth of what were then considered startups to gigantic corporations and the fall of giants.
Overall, if you’d purchased shares in any one of these for ‘just’ $1000 back then, and were brave enough to hold through the 2008-2009 market crash, the kinds of profit you’d have sown would have been incredible. Most businesses that saw an exponential growth were tech-oriented startups, but it doesn’t stop there. Rest assured though, the least you would have expected was a tenfold increase in your profit margin.
Netflix
Back in 2006, Netflix was still heavily invested in the DVD retail business. They were waging a war against Blockbuster, and the only way they could win, it seemed, was to set their prices as low as possible. This decision translated very poorly in the markets and they were running incredible losses. At those desperate moments, they even offered to sell themselves over to Blockbuster for a measly $50 million – an offer Blockbuster wholeheartedly turned down.
January 2007 saw a major change that would turn the whole movie industry on its head. They announced they’d be offering an online streaming service to their subscribers. Back then, they only had a thousand films, a pretty small library of movies. In fact, there was no original content on their part yet, so most people didn’t really think much of it. In 2007, having a local, physical copy was what everyone was pretty much used to. It just had to be a brazen attempt to rip off Apple and Amazon – the two companies that pioneered downloadable movies at the time.
Interestingly enough, they were even brave enough to offer what they dubbed ‘the Netflix Prize.’ This was an offer of $1,000,000 to anyone who could come up with an algorithm that could best their own ranking algorithms. The award ultimately went to the BellKor’s Pragmatic Chaos team for beating Netflix’s algorithm by over 10% accuracy.
Seemingly, Netflix was going to be a dead franchise because nobody really saw their efforts going anywhere — behind the curtains though, they were really busy at work. Due to their aggressive marketing, great technology, and original content, their stock would proceed to jump by over 5000% in value over ten years. A $1,000 investment would have resulted in returns of $51,647.