Title: ebusiness models
1e-business models
2Encyclopedia Britannica
- 1768 first encyclopedia in the English-speaking
world - Worlds most comprehensive and authoritative
encyclopedia - Aggressive sales and marketing
- Target middle-income families and their
aspirations for their children - 1990 sales of 650 million
- Dominant market share, steady growth generous
margins - Since 1990, sales have collapsed by over 80
3What happened?
- Britannica viewed the CD-ROM as a toy
- Microsoft licensed content from Funk Wagnalls
- Third-rate content, poor quality sound and images
- Not serious competition (?)
4Britannicas Response
- Britannica considered marketing the product on
CD-ROM - Britannica was too large to fit on a CD-ROM
- Britannica marketed text-only CD-ROM
- Sales force revolted because of losses in
commission - Bundled CD-ROM free with encyclopedia to avoid
channel conflict - CD-ROM alone sold for 1,000
- May 1995 Britannica sold for half its book
value
5Britannica
- Market research showed that the typical
encyclopedia is opened once a year - Sales force played on parents anxieties about
their childrens education - Now a PC is the most common way of easing
parental guilt - Incumbents are saddled with legacy assets
- Sales and distribution systems, brands, core
competencies - Competing in the digital economy may mean
cannibalising these assets or destroying them
6Moral
- New Economics of Information
- Evolving technological capabilities for sharing
and using information can transform business
definitions, industry definitions and competitive
advantage e.g. Napster - IT can destroy brands and businesses
- Britannicas vulnerability was due to its
dependence on the economics of intense personal
selling (sales force) - Implications for real estate, insurance, cars,
travel
Evans and Wurster (1997) Strategy and the New
Economics of Information, Harvard Business
Review, Sept-Oct
7e-Business Model Research Context
- MSc Research began October 2000
- Dot.com implosion circa Spring 2000 (Howcroft,
2001) - Pure-play dot.coms e.g. Boo, eToys
- Clicks and Mortar e.g. WorldOfFruit.com
- Initially the research focused on surveying the
landscape an empirical analysis, contrast to
the mainly qualitative research available at the
time
8Electronic Business Today
- e-commerce is no longer an alternative, but an
imperative - Landscape confusing for new entrants
- B2B segment is considerably larger 4-13 times
the size of B2C - B2B sector was expected to be worth 1.3 trillion
in 2003 - Coltman (2001) hype pre-dot.com collapse, but
new era of pessimism is an overreaction
9e-Business Model
- an architecture for product, service and
information flows (Timmers, 1999) - most discussed and least understood part of the
web (Rappa, 2000) - Ticoll et al (1998) 4 models
- Kaplan and Sawhney (2000) 4 models
- Timmers 11 models
- Rappa 30
- Osterwalder (2002) misuse of term led to loss
of credibility of the concept
10Why are e-business models important?
- Internet alters industry structures
- Channel cannibalisation
- Myths that old rules about business are
obsolete are widespread - Led to bad decisions
- Move from competitive advantage based on quality,
service features to competition based only on
price (Porter, 2001) - Need for appropriate e-business model so a firm
can identify where it is positioned in the value
chain (Rappa, 2003)
11Boo.com
- Fashion e-tailer
- Strong focus on brands, not a discount seller
- First-mover advantage
- Allowed company to raise substantial investment
capital - Porter (2001) argues that this is a myth
- Launched simultaneously in a number of
territories - Multiple currencies
- Multiple languages
- Varying tax-laws
12Boo.com
- At peak in 1999, company valued at 450m
- Burned 200m in 18 months
- major investors were JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs,
and the Benetton Family - Technology Problems
- required Flash plug-in, did not support Macintosh
users, required fast connection - systems integration problems with logistic
partners (UPS and Deutsche Post)
13Osterwalder (2002)
- Linder (2001) existing frameworks insufficient
to describe array of business model choices - Osterwalder and Pigneur (2002) e-business model
ontology (formal specification of how to
represent the objects, concepts and other
entities that are assumed to exist and the
relationships that hold among them)
14What is a Business Model? (Osterwalder, 2002)
Its the business logic of how a company makes
money in a sustainable way
15Business Models The Missing Link (Osterwalder,
2002)
STRATEGY
Business model
BUSINESS/ORG.
TECHNOLOGY
16(No Transcript)
17Planning Level
Strategy
ICT Pressure
e-Business opportunities change
Architectural Level
Business Model
e-Business process and adaptation
Implementation Level
Business Processes
Business Logic Triangle (Osterwalder et al, 2002)
18E-business model ontology (Osterwalder et al,
2002)
19Business Model Decision
- Dynamic Environment (Mintzberg, 1979)
- Uncertain Supply Chain
- Rapidly Changing Technology
- Repeated Product Evolution
- Thus, organisation is unable to predict future
conditions e.g. e-business model decision - wrong choices could have dire consequencesbut
need to act soon or risk being left behind (Wise
and Morrison, 2000)
20Simons (1960) 4 Phases of Decision-Making
- Intelligence, Design, Choice, Review
- An examination of the milieu for situations in
which a decision is required - this phase is crucial, as alternatives not
considered at this stage are very unlikely to be
involved in the decision scenario at a later
stage(Pomerol, 1994)
21Markets and Hierarchies
- Malone et al. (1987) argue that the ability of
Information Technology to provide cheap
connectivity, will result in a lowering of
coordination costs, and therefore will result in
a shift from hierarchies to markets
22Models - Timmers
23Models Kaplan and Sawhney
24Models Ticoll et al.
Open Source
Car manufacturer
Supermarket
25Successful Business Model (Afuah and Tucci)
High Customer Value Complementary Scope Control
over Pricing Defensible Sources of
Revenue Consistent Connected Activities Unique,
Inimitable Capabilities Excellent
Implementation Sustainability for the Future Low
cost Correct profit site
26Five Forces Model (Porter, 1980)
27Customer Value
- Differentiation
- Product features, timing, location, service,
product mix, linkage between functions, linkage
with other firms, reputation - Low Cost
- Reduction in information asymmetry
- Reduced transaction costs
- Distribution channel
28Scope
- Market Segments/Geographic Areas
- Business Market
- Industry, Firm Size e.g. SMEs
- Households
- Demographics e.g iVillage
- Universality property of internet facilitates
expansion - Firm must decide how much of the needs of the
segment it can serve
29Price
- Pricing strategy is crucial
- Knowledge-based products
- Market share and Margin
- Giving away a product and charging fpr later
versions - Giving away Product X and charging for related
Product Y e.g. Adobe Acrobat - Pricing low to penetrate the market
30Price
- Lock-In
- e.g. Microsoft Windows
- Switching costs
- Network Externalities
- The more users that own them, the more valuable
they are to users
31Common Internet Pricing Models
- Menu (fixed)
- One-to-One Bargaining
- Subscription (pay by use)
- Auction
- Reverse Auction
- Other Revenue Sources include
- Advertising
- Referral Links
32The importance of Market Share(Afuah Tucci,
p58)
33The importance of Market Size(Afuah Tucci, p59)
34Revenue Sources
- Selling Products
- Selling Product and Service
- Connected Activities
- RD, Marketing and Sales
- Value Chain (value is added to materials or
knowledge as it moves up the chain)
35Synthesis of Business models
36e-Business Model Characteristics
37Economic Control
- Items derived from Porters Five Forces model
- 5-point Likert Items (Strongly Agree.Strongly
Disagree)
38Functional Integration
- Scale developed by adapting lists of functions
from the modules of a leading ERP system - Please indicate the extent to which the
following are integrated with other processes and
functions in the organization. - Can opt out of responding to a particular item
if business process/function is not relevant.
39Functional Integration
- 5-point Likert items (Not at all Integrated,
Partially Integrated, Average Integration, Highly
Integrated, Completely Integrated)
40Supply/Value Chain Integration
- Uses same list of functions as Functional
Integration construct - Please indicate the extent to which the
following are integrated with processes and
functions in other firms in the supply chain
(i.e. customers and suppliers).
41Internal Technical Innovation
- 25 Likert scale items (strongly
disagreestrongly agree) - Constructs relative advantage, complexity,
compatability, ease of use, image, result
demonstrability, visibility, trialability
42External Technical Innovation
- Ability of the organisation to assimilate/adopt
innovations - Factors Competitive Price Intensity, Industry
Concentration, Organisational structure (degree
of centralisation) - 5-point Likert scale (neverfrequently)
43Sourcing
- Identify degree of Spot and Systematic sourcing
of both direct and indirect materials
44Operationalising the framework
- Scores from Likert items are used to give overall
scores for each of the 5 organisational
characteristics. - These can then be compared with the score
assigned to each business model.
45Methodology
- Field Study
- 5 manufacturing companies
- Semi-structured interviews administration of
scales
46Case PackCo
47e-Business Model Characteristics
48PackCo Findings
49Conclusions
- Need for validation of scales through field study
research in a larger number of organisations - Need for alteration of some existing scales e.g.
Supply chain integration, Internal and External
Innovation - Upstream and downstream issues e.g. Economic
Control