Want to Find the Next Amazon or Super Micro Computer? Look for Companies That Share Their Secret Winning Business Strategy.

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Two of the biggest long-term winners in the stock market, Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) and Super Micro Computer (NASDAQ: SMCI), don't have much in common at first glance. The former is an e-commerce leader and inventor of cloud computing. The latter is a manufacturer of data center servers.

But there's more in common than meets the eye. For one thing, both companies operate in fairly cutthroat, low-margin businesses: retail and server hardware.

Yet despite being in such difficult businesses, each has managed more than 9,000% returns (that's 90x) in the stock market over the past 20 years. That's more than 10 times the return of the Nasdaq 100 and over 33 times the return of the S&P 500!

AMZN Chart
AMZN data by YCharts.

This unconventional success for both Amazon and Super Micro can largely be attributed to another similarity between them: Both companies use an unconventional "building block" approach to product development.

Building blocks to build an empire

"Building blocks? Like Legos?" you might ask. "How would that simple concept result in such incredible business outperformance?"

The concept of breaking down your products and services into their smallest possible component parts might not blow you away at first. But the results have certainly been mind-blowing.

In fact, the strategy is so important to Amazon that CEO Andy Jassy devoted basically his entire 2023 letter to shareholders on the concept. And 2023 was a great year for Amazon. Over the past 12 months, free cash flow hit a whopping $50 billion, up from a $3.3 billion free cash outflow over the 12 months ended in March 2023.

Meanwhile, Super Micro has been touting its building block architecture for years. But as the computing world shifted from traditional computing to artificial intelligence (AI) acceleration, the inherent advantages of Super Micro's 30-year-old building block strategy suddenly came to the forefront, leading to its recent triple-digit growth.

Blocks in a triangular shape with arrows pointing up and to right.
Amazon and Super Micro each use a building block strategy. Image source: Getty Images.

How Amazon uses "primitives"

In his shareholder letter, Jassy outlines Amazon's evolution to a building block strategy, or what the company calls "primitives," as the correct approach for unlocking creativity of customers and employees alike:

What matters to builders is having the right tools to keep rapidly improving customer experiences. The best way we know how to do this is by building primitive services. Think of them as discrete, foundational building blocks that builders can weave together in whatever combination they desire.

Jassy describes the revelatory moment in the early 2000s when Amazon first opened up its highly trafficked e-commerce page to third-party sellers. One early customer trial was with Target (NYSE: TGT).