The Only Question That Matters
By Joshua Goldberg, Co-Managing Partner
The Decision Framework Behind Every Investment
At the end of every investment conversation…everything reduces to one question:
“Can this company stay ahead long enough to matter?”
Why This Question Exists
Markets do not reward innovation.
They reward controlled advantage.
Because without the barriers created by this control:
- Competitors enter
- Margins compress
- Value erodes
And it happens faster than most founders expect.
The Three Forces at Play
Every company is balancing:
- Exposure
How much of your innovation is visible? - Replication Speed
How quickly can others reproduce it? - Defensive Strength
How effectively can you slow them down?
Your outcome depends on how these forces interact.
What Strong Strategies Do
Strong IP strategies do not eliminate risk.
They manage timing.
They:
- Delay competition
- Preserve differentiation
- Extend the window of advantage
Long enough to:
- Scale
- Partner
- Exit
The Real Goal
Not to prevent competition forever.
That is unrealistic.
The goal is simpler, and more strategic:
Stay ahead long enough to win.
Where Most Companies Fall Short
They focus on:
- Filings instead of strategy
- Protection instead of control
- Volume instead of precision
Which can lead to:
- Overexposure
- Weak defensibility
- Shortened advantage windows
The Strategic Shift
The companies that succeed think differently.
They ask:
- What do we protect publicly?
- What do we protect privately?
- How do we slow our competition?
These successful companies design IP as an integral part of the business, not separate from it.
Final Insight
In this economy, value does not come from innovation alone.
It comes from how long you can keep your innovation to yourself.
If you are building, funding, or advising in plant innovation, your IP strategy is already shaping your outcome.
The only question is:
Is it extending your advantage, or quietly shortening it?
If you are not sure whether your current approach is truly protecting your advantage or simply creating the appearance of protection, it may be worth taking a second look. I have spent years helping companies navigate that distinction and am always open to a conversation.
