Growing up, you often hear a lot of household names such as Google, Boeing, Nordstrom, Walmart, or Costco without really knowing what they are. Big corporations from all over the world have been so registered into the society and people’s minds that we only know what they do and stopped thinking about their impacts to the society. In comparison, startups, though recognised by people, do not get remembered as easily and are not as integrated into our societies. However, it is important to note that both startups and big corporations are essential to the progressive improvements and growths of a society with the each of them providing different strengths, opportunities, and purposes.

By definition, a startup company is an entrepreneurial venture that is typically a newly emerged business that aims to provide an innovative product, process or service to the market and hopes to scale to a big company. On the other hand, a big corporation is a larger, more stable, and profit making enterprise that has certain social and economic impacts.

To better illustrate their differences, allow me to use the too commonly used but never disappointing analogy of comparing big corporations to the huge tankers and comparing startups to the small speed boats. The big tanker moves very slowly, is untouched by the ocean currents and waves, and hire a lot of people on board. The speed boat is agile, has a small team, and is capable of going far or be punished by the cruel nature of the sea.

Jumping off this analogy, let’s take a look at the strengths and weaknesses offered by startups and big corporations.

Startups:

Big Corporations

After reading these points, I don’t want you do treat corporations as boring entities and startups as time ticking bombs. The existence of both is extremely important. People needs to be hired by big corporations while innovation needs to be implemented by startups. However, this doesn’t mean big corporations are not innovative. Companies like Google, Apple, IBM, and Amazon are constantly looking at new technologies and creating revolutionary products.

Going back to the tanker vs speedboat analogy, you can treat big corporations as the tanker that moves slowly but never stopping. Startups on the other hand, will be the speedboats that explores different industries, the newest trends, and disrupting industries drastically. Uber disrupted the taxi industry without owning one car at all. AirBnB changed the hotel industry forever by not owning any real estate. WeWork changed the traditional concept of working space by through space sharing. Startups are constantly changing the traditional concept of things.

It is also a possibility that the two can work together. Startups are constantly being acquired by big corporations for their talents and unique value proposition. Facebook acquired Instagram, WhatsApp, and Oculus because it felt connected to what they were doing. Big corporations often treat startups as little R&D centres where innovation is created by constant failures and talented people.

Although startups and big corporations offer very different things, they both keep the society moving and ensures progress through their constant engagement in revolutionary changes and their look out for opportunities.

Jasper Chou is the Co-Founder of LYNKD, a new age product development and sourcing management firm that focuses on manufacturing and go-to market strategies.

Read Next:

10 Things I Learned in Entrepreneurship and How They Reflect in Life and Business