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Reed's Law

Reed's Law is a principle asserting that the utility or value of a large network, particularly one that supports group communication, scales exponentially with the number of its members (n). Formulated by David P. Reed, the law is often expressed as 2^n. This stands in stark contrast to its predecessors, Sarnoff's Law (value scales linearly, n) and Metcalfe's Law (value scales as the square of its users, n^2). The magic of Reed's Law lies in its focus on “group-forming networks.” While Metcalfe's Law counts the value of one-to-one connections, Reed's Law accounts for the immense value created by the formation of subgroups, communities, and collaborative teams. Think of a social media platform: its value isn't just in sending a message to one friend, but in creating group chats, fan pages, and community forums. This exponential growth in potential connections makes it the most powerful of the network effect laws and a key concept for investors trying to identify businesses with explosive growth potential.

The Laws of the Network: A Simple Comparison

Imagine you and your friends are starting a new book club. Let's see how the network's value grows as more people join, according to the three main laws.

Why Reed's Law Matters to Value Investors

For an investor, understanding Reed's Law isn't just academic; it's a powerful lens for identifying the most durable and valuable businesses in the digital age. It helps you spot a truly superior business model with a deep competitive moat.

Spotting the Ultimate Network Effect

Companies whose platforms facilitate group formation are tapping into the most potent form of network effects. Their value doesn't just grow; it compounds at a blistering pace as more users join. This creates a virtuous cycle: more users lead to more potential groups, which creates immense value, which in turn attracts even more users. This is the secret sauce behind some of the most dominant companies of the 21st century.

Valuation and Moat

A business powered by Reed's Law can command a far higher valuation than a company with a similar user count operating under Metcalfe's or Sarnoff's Law. The potential for exponential value growth means its future earnings power is vastly superior. Furthermore, this group-forming capability creates incredible stickiness. Leaving a network means not just losing individual connections but being cut off from multiple communities, making the service indispensable and the moat incredibly difficult for a competitor to cross once critical mass is achieved.

Real-World Examples

A Word of Caution

While powerful, Reed's Law describes potential value, not guaranteed value.