Why General Motors Thinks the First Self-Driving Company Will Win Big

Will there be a significant "first-mover" advantage in self-driving cars? Will the first company (or group of companies) to bring the technology to market enjoy significant long-term advantages over rivals that lag?

For a long time, I didn't think so, for reasons I'll explain in a moment. But General Motors (NYSE: GM) president Dan Ammann recently made an argument that has me thinking I'm wrong -- that the first (and maybe the second or third, but probably not the tenth) company to put lots of autonomous vehicles on the road will indeed have a big advantage over its rivals for years to come.

A line of white Chevrolet Bolt EVs with visible self-driving sensor hardware awaiting final assembly at GM's Orion Assembly Plant in Orion Township, Michigan.
A line of white Chevrolet Bolt EVs with visible self-driving sensor hardware awaiting final assembly at GM's Orion Assembly Plant in Orion Township, Michigan.

GM's self-driving hardware, a modified Chevrolet Bolt EV, is ready for mass production. Once GM's system is ready, it will be able to put thousands of self-driving Bolts on the road. Image source: General Motors.

Rethinking the advantage for the first-mover in self-driving

Almost a year ago, I argued that the first company to bring self-driving vehicles to market probably won't enjoy a big advantage. That argument held that because there were several serious, credible efforts underway to develop systems for self-driving vehicles, the technology was likely to become a commodity soon after its introduction -- and thus there wasn't much value in being first to market.

I thought that was a strong argument at the time. It makes sense if you look at how new automotive technologies (antilock brakes, adaptive cruise controls) have become available in the past. But it missed something important: Like other machine-learning systems, autonomous vehicles learn from experience. The more hours the system racks up on the road, encountering real-world conditions and challenges, the better it gets.

And -- this is the key -- these are connected vehicles: Lessons learned by one vehicle are instantly shared with all of the other vehicles using the same system. The more vehicles on the road, the faster the system learns.

As Ammann sees it, that means the first company to deploy self-driving vehicles at scale will have the opportunity to build up a huge competitive lead. Here's why.

Why GM thinks the first to market will win big

For several years now, GM executives have said that the company will bring its self-driving system to market "when it's ready," refusing to supply a specific date.

In a presentation last week, Ammann explained what "ready" means: GM's system will be ready when it's safer than a human driver in a complex urban environment, while reliably getting passengers to their intended destinations. Right now, GM thinks that could happen in 2019 -- if the system continues to improve at its current rate: