Title: Business Models Components
1- Business Models Components
Gilbert Peffer JAD Workshop October 22, 2002
2Determinants of Business Performance
- Business Model
- Components and linkages
- Dynamics
Performance
Internet
- Environment
- Competitive
- Macro
3Overview of Internet Properties
- Properties of Internet
- Impact of the Internet on the 5-Cs
- Limitation to transactions over the Internet
4Properties of Internet
- Mediating technology Internet facilitates
exchange relationships among parties distributed
in time and space - 4 types of interconnection
- B2B Business-to-business
- B2C Business-to-consumer
- C2C Consumer-to-consumer
- C2B Consumer-to-business
- Universality anybody anywhere in the world can
potentially make his products available to anyone
else in the world. - Network externalities the more people connected
to Internet, the more valuable it is.
5Properties of Internet
- Distribution channel Internet allows to
distribute music, news, video, software, tickets,
and so on. - Time moderator Internet makes possible to obtain
information 24 hours a day. - Information Asymmetry Shrinker Internet reduces
the difference of information available to
parties. - Infinite virtual capacity using the advances to
storage and network technologies, customers feel
that Internet has infinite capacity to serve
them.
6Properties of Internet
- Low cost standard everybody uses the same
protocol. As there is only one standard, costs
for users are lower. - Creative destroyer the low entry costs,
flexibility and unlimited possibilities allow
entrepreneurs to create new businesses. - Transaction-cost reducer Internet reduces the
costs of searching for sellers and buyers,
collecting information on products, negotiating
contracts and transportation.
7Impact of the Internet on the 5-Cs
- Properties of Internet have a huge impact on
the 5 main activities that rest on information
exchange coordination, community, content
communication and commerce - Impact on Coordination
- Internet reduces the cost of transactions
- Internet improves product-service features and
quality - Impact on Community
- Internet redefines communities, making them
larger and much more valuable - Distance and time are no drawbacks to join a
community
8Impact of the Internet on the 5-Cs
- Impact on Content
- Information, entertainment and other products are
delivered over the Internet to more people - Impact on Communication
- People can exchange electronic messages
real-time, to many people and with high content - Every user has the capacity to broadcast messages
9Impact of the Internet on the 5-Cs
- Impact on Commerce
- B2B businesses buy and sell goods and services
to and from each other. - Internet provides access to sellers and buyers
from all over the world - Internet can create B2B hubs, to provide a
central where sellers and buyers can go to find
each other - B2C businesses sell to consumers.
- Access to e-shops 24 hours a day
- Almost no limit to the number of goods an online
retailer can display - Firms can collect data and offer personalised
service - Some goods can be received instantaneously
- When the cost of finding a seller is high, the
exchange can involve an intermediary (e.g.
Amazon.com) - C2C consumers sell to other consumers.
- Usually, this involves an intermediary, such as
an action house. - C2B consumers state their price, and firms
either take it or leave it. - Usually, intermediaries play an important role
10Limitations to Transactions over the Internet
- Internet cannot transmit tacit knowledge (that
is, knowledge uncoded and nonverbalised). - Individuals and organisations are cognitively
limited. So, they may not be able to encode their
knowledge into a form that can be transmitted
over the Internet.
11Overview of Business Models
- Definition
- A taxonomy of Business Models
- Elements of a Business Model
12Definition
- An Internet business model is a set of
Internet and non-Internet-related activities
planned or evolving that allows a firm to make
money using the Internet and to keep the money
coming. - An business model should include answers to a
number of questions - What value offer to customers?
- Which costumers to provide the value to?
- How to price the value?
- Who to charge for it?
- What strategies to undertake in providing the
value? - How to provide the value?
- How to sustain any advantage from providing the
value?
13A Taxonomy of Business Models
- Brokerage firms act as market makers who bring
buyers and sellers together and charge a fee for
the transaction they enable. - Examples travel agents, online brokerage firms,
online auction houses. - Advertising the owner of a website provides some
content and services that attract visitors, and
makes money by charging advertisers fees. - Examples Yahoo, Altavista.
- Infomediary model a firm collects information on
consumers and their buying habits and sells it to
firms.
14A Taxonomy of Business Models
- Merchant wholesalers and retailers sell goods
and services over the Internet. - Manufacturer manufacturers try to reach end
users directly through the Internet. - Affiliate a merchant has affiliates whose
websites have click-through to the merchant,
which pays a fee to the affiliates each time a
visitor to an affiliates site clicks through to
the merchants site and buys something.
15A Taxonomy of Business Models
- Community users have invested in developing
relationships with members of their community and
are likely to visit the website frequently. - Example iVillage
- Subscription members pay a subscription price
and receive high-quality content. - Utility users pay for the services they consume.
16Elements of a Business Model
- Customer value
- Customers would buy a product from a firm only
if the product offers them something competitors
product do not. This something can take the form
of differentiated or low cost product. -
- Differentiation a firm can differentiate its
products in eight different ways - Product features
- Being the first to introduce it
- Ease of access to the products
- Service
- Product mix
- Association with another firm
- Brand-name reputation
- Low cost products or services cost customers
less than those of its competitors
17Elements of a Business Model
- Scope
- Scope deals with
- Market segments or geographic areas to which the
value should be offered - How many types of products that embody versions
of this value should be sold - Revenue sources
- Determination of the sources of a firms
revenues and profits. - It allows to make better strategic decisions
18Elements of a Business Model
- Price
- To profit from the value that firms offer
customers, they have to price it properly - Types of pricing
- Menu pricing sellers sets a price and buyers can
take or leave it. - One-to-one bargaining seller negotiates with a
buyer to determine at what point the buyer
considers the price appropriate for the value he
is getting. - Auction seller solicits bids from many buyers
and sells to the buyer with the best bid. - Reverse auction sellers decide whether to fulfil
the orders of potential buyers. - Barter swap of goofs for goods, or goods for
services.
19Elements of a Business Model
- Connected activities
- A firm must perform the activities that
underpin the value (value chain). - The activities should be consistent with the
value the firm is offering, reinforce each other,
take advantage of industry success drivers and
make the industry more attractive to the firm. - The activities a firm performs are a function of
where the technology is in that industrys life
cycle, the technological evolution of the
customers and what competitors are doing.
20Elements of a Business Model
- Implementation
- The way of carrying out the decisions depends
on several factors - Structure of a firm.
- Systems that allow information flow in the
shortest time to the right target for decision
making. - Motivation of employees, and capability of making
the right decisions with the available
information. - Recognizing the potential of an innovation.
- Organisational culture.
21Elements of a Business Model
- Capabilities
- Firms need resources to perform the activities
- Firms need the capacity to turn the resources
into customer value and profits competence. - The competitive advantage allows the firm to
offer its customers better value than competitors.
22Elements of a Business Model
- Sustainability
- To sustain a competitive advantage a firm can
pursue some subset of three generic strategies - Block strategy a firm tries to erect barriers
around its business model to prevent others from
imitating it. - Run strategy a firm must keep innovating its
business model. - Team-up strategy a firm can pool others
resources to strengthen its business model.