Episode 11
Adobe Doesn't Sell Software
It monetizes the file format you can't escape.
Everyone already speaks this format
The Big Idea
Adobe doesn't sell software. It sells the fact that everyone else already uses its files.
Most people think Adobe sells software. It doesn't, not exactly — plenty of cheaper, sometimes better editing tools exist. Nobody chooses Photoshop because it's the only option.
Adobe's real product isn't the application. It's the fact that everyone you'll ever need to collaborate with already uses its file formats. Everything else supports that objective.
The Invisible Business
Imagine a designer switching away from Adobe to save money. The software works fine — until a client sends a layered PSD file, or an agency expects a print-ready PDF built a certain way.
That friction isn't accidental. Behind it sits one invisible question: how do we make this the format everyone else already expects? That's the business.
Industry-standard file formats. Deep integration across creative workflows. Subscription pricing that never lets the relationship end. Every layer points toward a single outcome: nobody wants to be the one who can't open the file.
Why The Software Isn't The Product
Adobe spends heavily improving its editing tools. Most people assume better software is the business.
Better software is actually table stakes. The real business is having become the format the entire creative industry builds around — so switching away doesn't just mean learning new software, it means asking every collaborator to change too.
Viewed that way, every Adobe decision suddenly makes sense: why it moved from one-time purchases to subscriptions, why PDF became a universal standard instead of just an Adobe feature, why the free Acrobat Reader was worth giving away for decades.
Key Takeaways
File formats like PSD and AI become the real standard, not just software features.
Collaboration forces new users onto the same platform as everyone else.
Subscriptions turned a one-time purchase into permanent recurring revenue.
Industries standardize their workflows around Adobe, not just individuals.
Every new professional trained on Adobe deepens the industry-wide lock-in.
Bodhi Reflection
People think Adobe competes by building the best creative tools. Perhaps it competes by making sure every other tool has to open an Adobe file eventually. Once you see the invisible business, the subscription fee starts to look less like a software rental and more like a toll on the industry standard.