Archive for the ‘business model’ Category

Jun 27, 2008

WANTED: Business Model Innovators

Alexander Osterwalder

I would like to conduct a series of short video/phone-interviews with high profile business model innovators for the book project I’m working on. Then I could share them with you through the web…

Please send me some ideas of who I could/should interview. Even better, tell me how I can get in contact with that person (e.g. through your network). I’m looking for business model innovators (not mere innovators ;-) in any possible industry, such as pharma, banking, clothing, … The requirement is that the person is in top management and his company has a certain size (and visibility)

examples:

  • Niklas Zennström (or Janus Friis), KaZaA:Skype:Joost
  • Michael Dell, Dell
  • Stelios Haji-Ioannou, easyJet

I would also be interested in getting your ideas on innovative business model examples in general. Particularly those with a turn-over of over 100 mio USD.

Can you help me out?

Jun 18, 2008

Business Model Innovation Book (book structure prototype)

Alexander Osterwalder

The reflections on our book on business model innovation are advancing daily. Yves Pigneur, my co-author, and I have come up with a first rough prototype book structure. We will refine our thinking this Friday and we are, of course, curious to hear your feedback.

You can check out the structure in the slidecast below. It gives you an idea where we are heading, though this first draft structure only sketches out the rough outlines.

To listen to and visualize the slidecast, please hit the play button. All the rest is automatic.

I’m looking forward to your first feedbacks…

Jun 5, 2008

Online Seminar : Introduction to Business Model Design & Innovation

Alexander Osterwalder

Date: June 26, 17 :00 CET (Geneva, Berlin, Paris, Madrid)
Price: 150.- USD
Presenter: Dr. Alexander Osterwalder
Duration: 1 hour and question & answer

Are you interested in business models and business model innovation? Do you wonder how this topic will impact you, your company and your competitive environment in the future? Then you should participate in this web seminar. It will introduce you to the fundamentals of business model thinking – a topic that is still too often poorly defined.

In this web seminar you will learn why business model thinking is so important today. You will see how innovative business models are disrupting the airline and music industry. This is likely to challenge you to reflect on the consequences for your own company and industry. To facilitate this reflection we will learn how to use the Business Model Canvas. This approach will allow you to easily sketch out your own and your competitors’ business models. Throughout the web seminar we will use interesting and innovative cases from various industries to get a better grasp on the topic of business model innovation.

Key take-away of the web seminar – you will:

  • sense why it is indispensable for you to start thinking in terms of business models in today’s competitive landscape
  • learn how you can describe your own business model based on the intuitive and pragmatic business model canvas
  • understand what business model innovation is about and how it differs from other types of innovations (e.g. product or process innovation)
  • learn about interesting and innovative cases of business model innovation

Who should participate?

Managers, entrepreneurs, intrapreneurs, business strategists, consultants, academics, venture capitalists.

Caveat

In this introductory seminar we will not go into depth regarding the business model innovation process inside companies. This particular topic is reserved for a future seminar focusing on just that. Similarly, we will not go into depth as to business model assessment, which is also reserved for a future seminar. However, we strongly recommend that people interested in the special-topic seminars scheduled at a later date, follow the introductory web seminar.

General Information

The web seminar will consist of a one hour lecture by Dr. Alexander Osterwalder based on a set of PowerPoint slides. It will be followed by a question and answer session. Within 24 hours of your online registration and payment you will receive an url by email that will allow you to access the web seminar. You will receive a reminder email the day prior to the event including the url that gives you access to the web seminar. The session will run on the webex platform by Cisco.

Cancellation Policy

For cancellations received more than 48 hours prior to the start of the seminar, we will deduct a US$50 administrative fee and refund or credit the remaining fee. There will be no refund or credit for cancellations received less than 48 hours prior to the start of the online seminar. All cancellations or substitutions must be received in writing.

Feb 9, 2008

Business Model Innovation Workshop in Amsterdam at ULURU Innovation Theatre

Alexander Osterwalder

I’ll be giving a full day workshop on business model innovation at the ULURU innovation theatre in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on 3. April 2008.

The invitation (image left) shows that ULURU is a company that does things differently. They have a strong network among Dutch multinationals (including Heineken, TomTom, ING , KPN and many others).

Workshop Take Away: After this workshop you will know and understand innovative business models from various industries and be able to apply the business modelling methodology to your own company. You will also be able to use a pragmatic framework to innovate within your own business model.

Content: Help (senior) management foster business model innovation at large; Give (senior) managers a broad overview of innovatieve (disruptive) business models in various industries; We will show examples from various industries (including in wealth management, private banking, telecom (Skype)); The participants will learn how to apply a simple and pragmatic approach to achieve and implement business model innovation.

If you’re interested in participating click on the invitation image and contact them directly. Of the 25 available seats, only 10 are left after 4 days of workshop announcement. I’m sure it will be a great experience.

See you in Amsterdam!

Feb 5, 2008

Ad-hoc Business Model Stage Fight (LIFT'08 Geneva)

Alexander Osterwalder

Arvetica is organizing an Ad-hoc Business Model Stage Fight at LIFT’08 in Geneva, Switzerland. Just like last year we thought we would contribute to the workshop program of the conference…

In this half day workshop participants will learn about a method to rapidly prototype business models. Then they will form ad-hoc teams that compete against each other. Each team will come up with an innovative business model based on a given scenario. The attendees will jointly vote the winner by evaluating creativity, realism and story.

Images and take-aways will be available on this blog soon. I’m curious to see how participants will perform with “rapid business model prototyping” (RaBMoPro ;-)

For the attendees: Here the plan to get from Unimail (venue of other LIFT’08 workshops) to Arvetica, where the workshop “Ad-hoc Business Model Stage Fight” is taking place…

Directions to Arvetica (stage fight) from Unimail (other LIFT’08 workshops):

  • walk out of the main entrance of the Unimail building
  • turn right
  • walk straight (along the tram line)
  • cross the bridge
  • continue approx. 600m (street = route des Acacias)
  • Arvetica is just across the street from the Shell station
  • Address: route des Acacias 24
  • go inside the building and take the elevator to the 6th floor
  • WELCOME!
Sep 3, 2007

Course (in German) on Modeling Business Models – Day 1 of 4 half-days

Alexander Osterwalder

Last Saturday I started teaching a Masters class on “Modeling Business Models” at the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts (Hochschule für Wirtschaft HSW Luzern). It was the first half day in a series of 4 half day lectures. (NOTE: The course and all the following slides are in German).

The lecture is designed as an extension to a previous course which the class had on the topic of business process management. To me this is a perfect fit, because I see the modeling of business models as the next step after the wave of business process modeling that we now more or less master in most companies. I hope the students will like it…

Here the slides I used during class:

Here the group work the class will pursue during the next few lectures and which will count 50% of the final evaluation:

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Jun 2, 2007

PinPointers' Experience with the Business Model Concept

Alexander Osterwalder

Last week I talked to Michael Nørregard Wilkens and Niels Erik Haug-Larsen of the consulting firm PinPointers about their experience with the business model concept.

They do some interesting consulting work and have applied the business model concept in quite innovative ways. For example, with some of their clients they developed the company’s business model portfolio in order to help them innovate and streamline according to their strategic objectives.

I will write about the business model portfolio concept in the coming weeks

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Nov 5, 2005

What is a business model?

Alexander Osterwalder

Update: Business Model Innovation Book. We are currently writing a groundbreaking book on business model innovation (publication: June 2009). You can get special privileges and participate in the innovative business model of our book project on our book chunk platform

Update: Based on the overwhelming interest this post got, I updated the version from 2005

A business model is nothing else than a representation of how an organization makes (or intends to make) money. This can be nicely described through the 9 building blocks illustrated in the graphic below, which we call “business model canvas”.

Insight: In addition to this post check out the business model design template

The business model topic is very popular among business people today because in various industries we can see a proliferation of new and innovative business models (i.e. new ways of making money). In several industries new business models are threatening or even replacing established companies and conventional ways of doing business. Just have a look at the music or airline industry.

Hence, the interest in business models comes from two opposing sides:

  • Established companies have to find new and innovative business models to compete against growing competition and to fend off insurgents
  • Entrepreneurs want to find new and innovative business models to carve out their space in the marketplace

Within this context the business model concept is a particularly helpful unit of strategic analysis tailored to today’s competitive business environment. It helps executives as well as entrepreneurs increase their capacity to manage continuous change and constantly adapt to rapidly changing business environments by injecting new ideas into their business model.

But what actually is a business model?

In management meetings the question of what a business model is (even what “our” business model is) often remains relatively vague. The main reason for this is because business people have an intuitive understanding of business models. Normal, since the business model is about how an organization makes money, which is a manger’s job after all. However, there is often a lack of a more precise and shared understanding of what a business model is. Yet, such a common understanding is required if we want to have high quality discussions of one’s business model and make important business model decisions.

Therefore we have come up with the 9 building block approach to describing business models. It has the characteristics of any other type of model (e.g. in architecture or engineering).

Like other models it is a simplified description and representation of a complex real world object. It describes the original in a way that we understand its essence without having to deal with all its characteristics and complexities. In the same line of thought we can define a business model as a simplified description of how a company does business and makes money without having to go into the complex details of all its strategy, processes, units, rules, hierarchies, workflows, and systems.

Based on an extensive literature research and real-world experience we define a business model as consisting of 9 building blocks that constitute the business model canvas (readers of this blog will realize that this is an updated and slightly adapted version of the model):

  1. The value proposition of what is offered to the market;
  2. The segment(s) of clients that are addressed by the value proposition;
  3. The communication and distribution channels to reach clients and offer them the value proposition;
  4. The relationships established with clients;
  5. The key resources needed to make the business model possible;
  6. The key activities necessary to implement the business model;
  7. The key partners and their motivations to participate in the business model;
  8. The revenue streams generated by the business model (constituting the revenue model);
  9. The cost structure resulting from the business model.

Origins of the term business model

The term business model became popular only in the late 90s, which, personally I think is related to the rapid erosion of prices in the IT and telecom industry. The roots of my assumption lie in Transaction Cost Economics (TCE). Because it became so cheap to process, store and share information across business units and other companies all the way to the customer, many new ways of doing business became possible: Value chains were broken up and reconfigured; Innovative information-rich or -enriched products and services appeared; New distribution channels emerged; More customers were reached.

Ultimately this lead to globalization and increased competition, but, as described above, it also led to new ways of doing business. In other words, today there is a larger variety of how companies can make money: this means new in terms of what they do, how they do it and for whom they do it…

For managers and executives this means that they have a whole new range of possibilities to design their businesses. This results in innovative and competing business models in the same industries. Before, it used to be sufficient to say in what industry you where in, for somebody to understand what your company was doing. All players had more or less the same business model. Today it is not sufficient to choose a lucrative industry, but you must also design a competitive business model. In addition, increased competition and rapid copying of successful business models forces all players to continuously innovate and adapt their business model to gain and/or sustain a competitive edge.

Companies that thoroughly understand their business model and know how the building blocks relate to each other will be able to constantly rethink and redesign these blocks and their relationship to innovate before their business model is copied.

Business Models & Innovation

The term business model is also closely related to innovation. As I mentioned, the business model concept is related to a whole new range of business design opportunities. There are examples of business model innovations in each of the 9 building blocks described. The most obvious is innovating in the value proposition. When mobile phones appeared in the market they offered a different value proposition than fixed line phones. In the early days of the Internet popular indexes like Yahoo! helped people find information on the Web. Regarding target customer segments, low-cost airlines like EasyJet have brought flying to the masses. Dell became really successful by exploring the web as a distribution channel. Gillette has made a fortune by establishing a continuous relationship with customers based on its disposable razors. Apple resurged based on its core capacity of bringing
design to computers and electronic gadgets. Cisco became famous for its capacity of configuring activities in new and innovative supply chains. Intel thrived for its capacity to get partners to build on its processing platform. Google tapped in an innovative revenue streams by linking highly specific search results and content with text ads. Wal-Mart became dominant by its ability to slash cost throughout its business model.

For conference or workshop engagements on the topic of business models, please contact me at alex@businessmodeldesign.com and ask for a speaker’s profile

Jul 19, 2005

Skype's business model and its disruptive potential for the telecom sector

Alexander Osterwalder

Skype is a company offering free Voice over IP (VoIP) on the Internet and they are enjoying a phenominal success. Since I’ve intervied them in March this year they grew their number of employees from about 100 to 170. Now that is what I call lightspeed growth.

However, what is of particular interest is how their business model design is different from the one of a traditional telco. With a group of collaborators from the University of Lausanne we tried to identify Skype’s disruptive potential by analyzing its business model and comparing it to a traditional telco. I uploaded that study and the detailed PowerPoint presentation I recently made in Bangkok to my consulting website.

Read the paper on Skype’s disruptive business model design.
Look at the detailed PowerPoint presentation about the business model comparison.