Jonathan A. Knee is the author of The Accidental Investment Banker, The Curse of the Mogul, and Class Clowns. He has written dozens of op-eds, book reviews and magazine articles over the past three decades on a wide variety of topics touching on culture, business, law, economics and public policy in publications including The Atlantic, Wall Street Journal and New York Times. Since 2014, he has served as the Book Entry columnist for the New York Times Dealbook. He is the Michael T. Fries Professor of Professional Practice in Media and Technology at Columbia Business School, where he also serves as co-Director of the Media and Technology Program. Mr. Knee has been an investment banker for over 25 years, at Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Evercore Partners, where he remains a senior advisor.
“In ‘The Platform Delusion’ Jonathan Knee takes apart the magical aura of one of Silicon Valley's biggest conceptual exports."" —The New York Times ""A cogent, arresting argument...Knee’s untangling of the complexities of platforms and their backers is steadily accessible and surprising."" —Publishers Weekly “In pursuit of what makes for a powerful and successful tech company, The Platform Delusion by Jonathan A Knee opts for the broad scope.” —Financial Times “Every generation flatters itself by thinking it has reinvented the rules of business. Knee’s book is a jolting and often hilarious exposure of our delusions that teaches, once again, that the fundamentals of business may not have changed quite as much as you think they have. Everyone should read this book.” —Tim Wu, author of The Curse of Bigness “Jonathan Knee mercilessly cuts through the hype and wishful thinking about America’s best-known tech giants to show which really has the coveted competitive advantages likely to reward investors. I can almost guarantee you’ll be as surprised as I was.” —James B. Stewart, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Disney Wars “In the worlds of business and investing, the word ‘platform’ has acquired an almost magical significance. Many believe that the term can manifest wealth and prestige for a business. But what does the word really mean? When does it mislead? And how ultimately should we as a society manage the role these businesses play in our life? It’s critical questions like these that Jonathan Knee wrestles with and answers in his important new book, The Platform Delusion.” —Bethany McLean, contributing editor, Vanity Fair, and author of The Smartest Guys in the Room and All the Devils Are Here “Jonathan Knee has done it again. He identifies where value actually comes from in platform companies. (Spoiler alert: competitive advantage, just like your economics professor taught you.) The book is a must read for students of platform companies and their valuation.” —Glenn Hubbard, Russell L. Carson Professor of Economics and Finance and Dean Emeritus at Columbia Business School “Essential reading if you really want to understand the age of the digital giants. Jonathan Knee brushes magical thinking and Silicon Valley hype aside and makes a compelling case that while technology changes, the fundamentals of business never do.” —Mark Thompson, chairman of Ancestry and former CEO and president at The New York Times Company “Jonathan combines the gimlet eye of a banker with the methodical rigor of an academic to produce a deeply thought-out look at the innards of tech industry business models.” —Mark Colodny, co-head of private equity and global head of technology at Warburg Pincus “The nation’s best business writer.” —Michael Wolff, USA Today