From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishoutperformout‧per‧form /ˌaʊtpəˈfɔːm $ -pərˈfɔːrm/ verb [transitive] BETTERto be more successful than someone or something else Stocks generally outperform other investments.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
outperform• Scorpion is said to outperform a SparcStation 2 by a factor of between 12 and 15 times.• Foreign-owned industry tends to outperform domestically-owned industry in exporting in most Third World and indeed in some sectors in First World countries.• Not everyone is prepared for such trauma, even though studies show that stocks outperform other investments, in the long run.• Pippin may even outperform similar computers from Oracle and Sun.• The manufacturer, which makes everything from bread to handguns and auto parts, said it was outperforming the economy in general.• If we add expertise as a variable, then the lone expert will far outperform the inexperienced group.• Spanish students outperformed U.S. students in science.From Longman Business Dictionaryoutperformout‧per‧form /ˌaʊtpəˈfɔːm-pərˈfɔːrm/ verb [transitive] to do better or be more successful than someone or something elseStocks generally outperform other investments.Clinical trials have shown that it outperforms existing drugs.→ See Verb table