PALO ALTO, Calif. — It is often said that Britain and the United States are two countries divided by a common language. That is also true of Washington and Silicon Valley. The other day, I was interviewing Alan S. Cohen, an expert on networks who has been involved in several successful startups. At one point, Cohen began talking about the importance of "collaboration" both within and between firms in Silicon Valley. Then he stopped and said it's interesting that in Silicon Valley "collaboration" is defined as something you do with another colleague or company to achieve greatness — something to be praised — as in: "They collaborated on that beautiful piece of software." But in Congress "collaboration" means something very different today. It's the second definition — collaboration is an act of treason — something you do when you cross over to vote with the other party. In Silicon Valley, great "collaborators" are prized; in Washington, they are hanged. Said Cohen, who was vice president at Nicira, a networking startup that recently sold for $1.26 billion: "In Washington, when they say 'collaborator' they mean 'traitor'; here they mean 'colleague.'"
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It's not the only reason, but it's a big reason that Silicon Valley is thriving more than ever, finding more ways to solve bigger and bigger problems faster, and that Washington is only capable of producing 11th-hour, patched-together, Rube Goldberg compromises, with no due diligence, that produce only suboptimal outcomes to our biggest problems. "People in Washington," said Cohen, "forgot that they are developers: 'I am on this committee. I have to fix this problem and write some software to do it,' and that requires collaboration. They have forgotten their job and the customer."
Don't get me wrong, Silicon Valley is not some knitting circle where everyone happily shares their best ideas. It is the most competitive, dog-eat-dog, I-will-sue-you-if-you-even-think-about-infringing-my-patents innovation hub in the world.
Despite the heated competition, lots of collaboration still happens here for one main reason: to serve the customer the best product or service. One way is through new open-source innovation platforms like GitHub — a kind of "Wikipedia for programmers" — where hobbyists, startups and big firms share ideas to enlist more people (either within a firm in restricted ways or from the outside in a wide open manner) to help improve their software or websites.
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Another way is through "co-opetition." There are many examples here of companies trying to kill each other in one market but working together in another — to better serve customers. Microsoft Windows runs on Apple Macs because customers wanted it. When Apple Maps failed, Apple asked its users to download Google Maps. Finally, within firms, it is understood that to thrive in today's market, solve the biggest problems and serve customers, you need to assemble the best minds from anywhere in the world.
"When you obsess about the customer, you end up defeating your competition as a byproduct," said K.R. Sridhar, the founder of Bloom Energy, a fuel-cell company. "When you are just obsessed about the competition, you end up killing yourself" as a byproduct — "because you are not focused on the customer."
The far-right lurch of the GOP's base has made this problem worse. When President Barack Obama built his health care plan on Mitt Romney's operating system in Massachusetts, Romney was so focused on coddling his base to beat Obama — rather than trying to improve Obama's iteration of Romney's own design to best serve all the customers — that Romney disowned his own software. What company would do that?
"Sure, competition here is sharp-elbowed," said Reid Hoffman, a co-founder of LinkedIn. "But no one can succeed by themselves. Apple today is totally focused on how it can better work with its ((applications)) developer community." It cannot thrive without them. "The only way you can achieve something magnificent is by working with other people," said Hoffman. "There is lots of co-opetition."
With collaboration, one plus one can often turn out to be four, says Jeff Weiner, the CEO of LinkedIn, adding: "I will always work with you — if I know we'll get to four. You can't build great products alone. And if everyone understood that you can't build great government alone, our country would be in a different place."