Abdm4223 lecture week 4 250512 part 1

Stephen Ong
Stephen Ongat um Universiti Putra Malaysia
ABDM4233 ENTREPRENEURSHIP

From Business Model to
    Strategic Plan :

Part 1 : Business Model

               by
          Stephen Ong


 Principal Lecturer (Specialist)
  Visiting Professor, Shenzhen
The social enterprise Mission
             statement
   It should be clear and succinct
   It should explain:
     What the enterprise will do
     How it is entrepreneurial
     Why it is important

   This should occur before planning
    activities
       A mission statement has goals and
        measures of progress towards goal
EMBRACE
 VISION  : Every woman and
  child has an equal chance for a
  healthy life.
 MISSION : Advancing Maternal
  and Child Health
             … by providing innovative
            solutions to the world's most
                  vulnerable populations
What a mission statement
           should specify
   What the enterprise will and will not do
   How it creates and measures value
   How an enterprise innovates or adapts
   How success will be measured
$80 for 15cents
… Keep it to 3 Words
MISSION
NIKE 2012      3 KEY WORDS
               INSPIRATION

               INNOVATION

               ATHLETE
One Laptop per Child
http://one.laptop.org   MISSION

                         To   empower
                         the world's
                         poorest
 We
 provide
        aim     to
             each
                         children
 child   with    a       through
 rugged,      low-
 cost, low-power,        education
Benefits of a good mission
                statement
   It provides focus
       Social entrepreneurs can stay on target as
        they develop the concept
   It helps to attract support
     As a marketing tool, it brings other
      resources into the enterprise
     For example, volunteers, donors, partners
From social mission to business
            model
 Business model – a plan for how
  the mission will be achieved and
  how the enterprise will create value
 A general description of how the
  enterprise will operate:
     Its mission
     Its strategic resources
     Its partners
     How it will serve its beneficiaries
Business model for
    EMBRACE
Threats to business models
   Demand side threats
    A   product or service that finds no
      market – people don’t want it
     Its value is not accepted by clients

   Supply side threats
     Too
        much capital needed, or too
     much ongoing cost to sustain itself
   Either threat can derail an
    enterprise
Many social enterprises fail
   Persistent lack of income is a common
    reason
   A supply explanation would be that
    costs are too high
   A demand explanation would be that
    revenues are too low
   Both flaws can be examined in the
    business model
What is a Business Model?
   Model
       A model is a plan or diagram that’s used to make or
        describe something.
   Business Model
       A firm’s business model is its plan or diagram for how it
        competes, uses its resources, structures its relationships,
        interfaces with customers, and creates value to sustain
        itself on the basis of the profits it generates.
       The term “business model” is used to include all the
        activities that define how a firm competes in the
        marketplace.
Changing Business Models
Dell’s Business Model
                               1 of 2


   Beyond Its Own Boundaries
       It’s important to understand that a firm’s business
        model takes it beyond its own boundaries.
       Almost all firms partner with others to make their
        business models work.
       In Dell’s case, it needs the cooperation of its suppliers,
        customers, and many others to make its business model
        work.
Dell’s Business Model
                             2 of 2

Dell’s Approach to Selling PCs versus Traditional Manufacturers
The Importance of Business Models
      Having a clearly articulated business model is important
                   because it does the following:

• Serves as an ongoing extension of feasibility analysis. A business
  model continually asks the question, “Does this business make
  sense?”
• Focuses attention on how all the elements of a business fit
  together and constitute a working whole.
• Describes why the network of participants needed to make a
  business idea viable are willing to work together.
• Articulates a company’s core logic to all stakeholders, including
  the firm’s employees.
Diversity of Business Models

                          • There is no standard business
                            model for an industry or for
                            a target market within an
Diversity or Variety in     industry.
                          • However, over time, the most
  Business Models           successful business models
                            in an industry predominate.
                          • There are always opportunities
                            for business model innovation.
How Business Models Emerge
                               1 of 3


   The Value Chain
       The value chain is the string of activities that moves a
        product from the raw material stage, through
        manufacturing and distribution, and ultimately to the
        end user.
       By studying a product’s or service’s value chain, an
        organization can identify ways to create additional
        value and assess whether it has the means to do so.
       Value chain analysis is also helpful in identifying
        opportunities for new businesses and in understanding
        how business models emerge.
How Business Models Emerge
             2 of 3

       The Value Chain
How Business Models Emerge
                                    3 of 3


   The Value Chain (continued)
       Entrepreneurs look at the value chain of a product or a
        service to pinpoint where the value chain can be made
        more effective or to spot where additional “value” can
        be added.
       This type of analysis may focus on:
            A single primary activity such as marketing and sales.
            The interface between one stage of the value chain and
             another, such as the interface between operations and outgoing
             logistics.
            One of the support activities, such as human resource
             management.
Potential Fatal Flaws in Business Models

   Fatal Flaws
       Two fatal flaws can render a business model untenable
        from the beginning:
            A complete misread of the customer
            Utterly unsound economics
“JOBS to be Done”
   Video :“What JOB does a Milkshake Do?”
   Prof. Clayton M. Christensen, Harvard Business School
Osterwalder’s Business Model
http://www.businessmodelgeneration.com/canvas
9 Components of Business Model
           (Osterwalder 2010)
1.   Customer        1.   Key Activities
     Segments        2.   Key Resources
2.   Value           3.   Key Partners
     Propositions
3.   Customer        1.   Revenue Stream
     Relationships
                     2.   Cost Structure
4.   Channels
1. Customer Segments
   For whom are we               Customer Gains?
    creating value?
   Who are our most
    important
    customers?
   Mass Market/ Niche            Customer Pain?
    Market/ Segmented/
    Diversified/ Multi-sided
    Platform
   What are JOBS to
    be done?
2. Value Propositions
                                characteristics
   What value do we deliver    Newness
    to the customer?            Performance
   Which one of our            Customization

    customer’s problems are     “Getting   the Job Done”
    we helping to solve?        Design

                                Brand/Status
   What bundles of products    Price
    and services are we         Cost Reduction
    offering to each Customer   Risk Reduction
    Segment?                    Accessibility

   Which customer needs        Convenience/Usability

    are we satisfying?             Gain creators?
   Get the JOBS done?
                                   Pain relievers?
3. Customer Relationships
   What type of relationship  Examples
    does each of our           Personal assistance
    Customer Segments          Dedicated Personal
    expect us to establish and Assistance
    maintain with them?
                               Self-Service
   Which ones have we
                               Automated Services
    established?
                               Communities
   How are they integrated
                               Co-creation
    with the rest of our
    business model?
   How costly are they?
channel phases:
4. Channels                     1. Awareness : How do we
                                raise awareness about our
   Through which Channels do company’s products /services?
    our Customer Segments       2. Evaluation : How do we help
    want to be reached?         customers evaluate our
   How are we reaching them    organization’s Value
    now?                        Proposition?
   How are our Channels        3. Purchase : How do we allow
    integrated?                 customers to purchase specific
                                products/services?
   Which ones work best?
                                4. Delivery : How do we deliver
   Which ones are most cost-   a Value Proposition to
    efficient?                  customers?
   How are we integrating them 5. After sales : How do we
    with customer routines?     provide post-purchase
                                customer support?
5. Key Activities
   What Key Activities categories
    do our Value        Production

    Propositions        Problem Solving

    require?            Platform/Network

   Our Distribution
    Channels?
   Customer
    Relationships?
   Revenue streams?
6. Key Resources
   What Key           types of resources
    Resources do our   Physical

    Value Propositions Intellectual (brand
    require?           patents, copyrights,
                       data)
   Our Distribution
                       Human
    Channels?
                       Financial
   Customer
    Relationships?
   Revenue Streams?
7. Key Partners
   Who are our Key        motivations for
    Partners?              partnerships:
                           Optimization and
   Who are our key
    suppliers?             economy
                           Reduction of risk and
   Which Key
                           uncertainty
    Resources are we
                           Acquisition of
    acquiring from
    partners?              particular resources
                           and activities
   Which Key Activities
    do partners perform?
types:
    8. Revenue Stream                Asset sale

                                     Usage fee

                                     Subscription Fees
   For what value are our           Lending/ Renting/ Leasing
    customers really willing to      Licensing

    pay?                             Brokerage fees

                                     Advertising
   For what do they currently
                                  fixed pricing
    pay?                          List Price
   How are they currently        Product feature dependent

    paying?                       Customer segment dependent

                                  Volume dependent
   How would they prefer to
    pay?                           dynamic pricing
                                   Negotiation (bargaining)
   How much does each             Yield Management

    Revenue Stream contribute      Real-time-Market

    to overall revenues?
is your business more:
    9. Cost Structure    Cost Driven (leanest cost
                         structure, low price value
                         proposition, maximum
 What are the most      automation, extensive
  important costs        outsourcing)
                         Value Driven ( focused on

  inherent in our        value creation, premium value
                         proposition)
  business model?
 Which Key              characteristics:
  Resources are most     Fixed Costs (salaries,
                         rents, utilities)
  expensive?             Variable costs

 Which Key Activities   Economies of scale

  are most expensive?    Economies of scope
Business Model Test Drive
1.   How much do switching costs prevent your
     customers from churning?
2.   How scalable is your business model?
3.   Does your business model produce recurring
     revenues?
4.   Do you earn before you spend?
5.   How much do you get others to do the work?
6.   Does your business model provide built-in
     protection from competition?
7.   Is your business model based on a game
     changing cost structure?
Business Model of Facebook
Business Model of Zynga
Strategic Business Model
  (Barringer & Ireland 2012)
Four Components of the Business Model
Core Strategy
                               1 of 3


   Core Strategy
       The first component of a business model is the core
        strategy, which describes how a firm competes relative
        to its competitors.
   Primary Elements of Core Strategy
       Mission statement
       Product/market scope
       Basis for differentiation
Core Strategy
                               2 of 3

              Primary Elements of Core Strategy


                       A firm’s mission, or mission statement,
   Mission
                     describes why it exists and what its business
  Statement
                         model is supposed to accomplish.




Product/Market      A company’s product/market scope defines the
    Scope               products and markets on which it will
                                   concentrate.
Core Strategy
                               3 of 3

             Primary Elements of Core Strategy



                  It is important that a new venture differentiate
                  itself from its competitors in some way that is
   Basis of         important to its customers. If a new firm’s
Differentiation      products or services aren’t different from
                   those of its competitors, why should anyone
                                     try them?
Strategic Resources
                                     1 of 3


   Strategic Resources
       A firm is not able to implement a strategy without
        resources, so the resources a firm has affect its business
        model substantially.
            For a new venture, its strategic resources may initially be
             limited to the competencies of its founders, the opportunity
             they have identified, and the unique way they plan to serve
             their market.
       The two most important strategic resources are:
            A firm’s core competencies
            Strategic assets
Strategic Resources
                                2 of 3

          Primary Elements of Strategic Resources

                A core competency is a resource or capability that
               serves as a source of a firm’s competitive advantage.
   Core               Examples include Sony’s competence in
Competencies   miniaturization and Dell’s competence in supply chain
                                   management.


                Strategic assets are anything rare and valuable that a
  Strategic       firm owns. They include plant and equipment,
   Assets        location, brands, patents, customer data, a highly
                    qualified staff, and distinctive partnerships.
Strategic Resources
                               3 of 3


   Importance of Strategic Resources
       New ventures ultimately try to combine their core
        competencies and strategic assets to create a sustainable
        competitive advantage.
       This factor is one that investors pay close attention to
        when evaluating a business.
       A sustainable competitive advantage is achieved by
        implementing a value-creating strategy that is unique
        and not easy to imitate.
       This type of advantage is achievable when a firm has
        strategic resources and the ability to use them.
Partnership Network
                                       1 of 3


   Partnership Network
       A firm’s partnership network is the third component of
        a business model. New ventures, in particular, typically
        do not have the resources to perform key roles.
       In most cases, a business does not want to do everything
        itself because the majority of tasks needed to build a
        product or deliver a service are not core to a company’s
        competitive advantage.
       A firm’s partnership network includes:
            Suppliers
            Other key relationships
Partnership Network
                                2 of 3

         Primary Elements of Partnership Network

                   A supplier is a company that provides parts or
 Suppliers      services to another company. Intel is Dell’s primary
                      suppler for computer chips, for example.



                  Firms partner with other companies to make their
                 business models work. An entrepreneur’s ability to
 Other Key       launch a firm that achieves a competitive advantage
Relationships     may hinge as much on the skills of the partners as
                         on the skills within the firm itself.
Partnership Network
                    3 of 3

The Most Common Types of Business Partnerships
Customer Interface
                                   1 of 3


   Customer Interface
       The way a firm interacts with its customer hinges on
        how it chooses to compete.
            For example, Amazon.com sells books over the Internet while
             Barnes & Noble sells through its traditional bookstores and
             online.
       The three elements of a company’s customer interface
        are:
            Target customer
            Fulfillment and support
            Pricing model
Customer Interface
                                 2 of 3

           Primary Elements of Customer Interface


  Target            A firm’s target market is the limited group of
  Market         individuals or businesses that it goes after or tries to
                                      appeal to.


                  Fulfillment and support describes the way a firm’s
 Fulfillment    product or service reaches its customers. It also refers
and Support       to the channels a company uses and what level of
                            customer support it provides.
Customer Interface
                           3 of 3

       Primary Elements of Customer Interface




                 The third element of a company’s customer
 Pricing       interface is its pricing structure. Pricing models
Structure      vary, depending on a firm’s target market and its
                               pricing philosophy.
Recap: The Importance of Business
                  Models
   Business Models
       It is very useful for a new venture to look at itself in a
        holistic manner and understand that it must construct
        an effective “business model” to be successful.
       Everyone that does business with a firm, from its
        customers to its partners, does so on a voluntary basis.
        As a result, a firm must motivate its customers and its
        partners to play along.
       Close attention to each of the primary elements of a
        firm’s business model is essential for a new venture’s
        success.
Further Reading
   Scarborough, Norman, M. 2011. Essentials of
    Entrepreneurship and Small Business
    Management. 6th edition. Pearson.
   Brooks, Arthur C. (2006) Social Entrepreneurship :
    A Modern Approach to Social Value Creation.
    Pearson
   Barringer, Bruce R. & Ireland, R. Duane, 2011
    Entrepreneurship – Successfully launching new
    ventures 4th edition, Pearson.
   Schaper, M., Volery, T., Weber, P. & Lewis, K. 2011.
    Entrepreneurship and Small Business. 3rd Asia
    Pacific edition. John Wiley.
   Osterwalder, A. & Piqneur,Y. 2011 Business Model
    Generation . Business Model Foundry.
1 von 54

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Abdm4223 lecture week 4 250512 part 1

  • 1. ABDM4233 ENTREPRENEURSHIP From Business Model to Strategic Plan : Part 1 : Business Model by Stephen Ong Principal Lecturer (Specialist) Visiting Professor, Shenzhen
  • 2. The social enterprise Mission statement  It should be clear and succinct  It should explain:  What the enterprise will do  How it is entrepreneurial  Why it is important  This should occur before planning activities  A mission statement has goals and measures of progress towards goal
  • 3. EMBRACE  VISION : Every woman and child has an equal chance for a healthy life.  MISSION : Advancing Maternal and Child Health  … by providing innovative solutions to the world's most vulnerable populations
  • 4. What a mission statement should specify  What the enterprise will and will not do  How it creates and measures value  How an enterprise innovates or adapts  How success will be measured
  • 6. … Keep it to 3 Words
  • 7. MISSION NIKE 2012 3 KEY WORDS INSPIRATION INNOVATION ATHLETE
  • 8. One Laptop per Child http://one.laptop.org MISSION  To empower the world's poorest We provide aim to each children child with a through rugged, low- cost, low-power, education
  • 9. Benefits of a good mission statement  It provides focus  Social entrepreneurs can stay on target as they develop the concept  It helps to attract support  As a marketing tool, it brings other resources into the enterprise  For example, volunteers, donors, partners
  • 10. From social mission to business model  Business model – a plan for how the mission will be achieved and how the enterprise will create value  A general description of how the enterprise will operate:  Its mission  Its strategic resources  Its partners  How it will serve its beneficiaries
  • 12. Threats to business models  Demand side threats A product or service that finds no market – people don’t want it  Its value is not accepted by clients  Supply side threats  Too much capital needed, or too much ongoing cost to sustain itself  Either threat can derail an enterprise
  • 13. Many social enterprises fail  Persistent lack of income is a common reason  A supply explanation would be that costs are too high  A demand explanation would be that revenues are too low  Both flaws can be examined in the business model
  • 14. What is a Business Model?  Model  A model is a plan or diagram that’s used to make or describe something.  Business Model  A firm’s business model is its plan or diagram for how it competes, uses its resources, structures its relationships, interfaces with customers, and creates value to sustain itself on the basis of the profits it generates.  The term “business model” is used to include all the activities that define how a firm competes in the marketplace.
  • 16. Dell’s Business Model 1 of 2  Beyond Its Own Boundaries  It’s important to understand that a firm’s business model takes it beyond its own boundaries.  Almost all firms partner with others to make their business models work.  In Dell’s case, it needs the cooperation of its suppliers, customers, and many others to make its business model work.
  • 17. Dell’s Business Model 2 of 2 Dell’s Approach to Selling PCs versus Traditional Manufacturers
  • 18. The Importance of Business Models Having a clearly articulated business model is important because it does the following: • Serves as an ongoing extension of feasibility analysis. A business model continually asks the question, “Does this business make sense?” • Focuses attention on how all the elements of a business fit together and constitute a working whole. • Describes why the network of participants needed to make a business idea viable are willing to work together. • Articulates a company’s core logic to all stakeholders, including the firm’s employees.
  • 19. Diversity of Business Models • There is no standard business model for an industry or for a target market within an Diversity or Variety in industry. • However, over time, the most Business Models successful business models in an industry predominate. • There are always opportunities for business model innovation.
  • 20. How Business Models Emerge 1 of 3  The Value Chain  The value chain is the string of activities that moves a product from the raw material stage, through manufacturing and distribution, and ultimately to the end user.  By studying a product’s or service’s value chain, an organization can identify ways to create additional value and assess whether it has the means to do so.  Value chain analysis is also helpful in identifying opportunities for new businesses and in understanding how business models emerge.
  • 21. How Business Models Emerge 2 of 3 The Value Chain
  • 22. How Business Models Emerge 3 of 3  The Value Chain (continued)  Entrepreneurs look at the value chain of a product or a service to pinpoint where the value chain can be made more effective or to spot where additional “value” can be added.  This type of analysis may focus on:  A single primary activity such as marketing and sales.  The interface between one stage of the value chain and another, such as the interface between operations and outgoing logistics.  One of the support activities, such as human resource management.
  • 23. Potential Fatal Flaws in Business Models  Fatal Flaws  Two fatal flaws can render a business model untenable from the beginning:  A complete misread of the customer  Utterly unsound economics
  • 24. “JOBS to be Done”  Video :“What JOB does a Milkshake Do?”  Prof. Clayton M. Christensen, Harvard Business School
  • 27. 9 Components of Business Model (Osterwalder 2010) 1. Customer 1. Key Activities Segments 2. Key Resources 2. Value 3. Key Partners Propositions 3. Customer 1. Revenue Stream Relationships 2. Cost Structure 4. Channels
  • 28. 1. Customer Segments  For whom are we  Customer Gains? creating value?  Who are our most important customers?  Mass Market/ Niche  Customer Pain? Market/ Segmented/ Diversified/ Multi-sided Platform  What are JOBS to be done?
  • 29. 2. Value Propositions characteristics  What value do we deliver Newness to the customer? Performance  Which one of our Customization customer’s problems are “Getting the Job Done” we helping to solve? Design Brand/Status  What bundles of products Price and services are we Cost Reduction offering to each Customer Risk Reduction Segment? Accessibility  Which customer needs Convenience/Usability are we satisfying?  Gain creators?  Get the JOBS done?  Pain relievers?
  • 30. 3. Customer Relationships  What type of relationship Examples does each of our Personal assistance Customer Segments Dedicated Personal expect us to establish and Assistance maintain with them? Self-Service  Which ones have we Automated Services established? Communities  How are they integrated Co-creation with the rest of our business model?  How costly are they?
  • 31. channel phases: 4. Channels 1. Awareness : How do we raise awareness about our  Through which Channels do company’s products /services? our Customer Segments 2. Evaluation : How do we help want to be reached? customers evaluate our  How are we reaching them organization’s Value now? Proposition?  How are our Channels 3. Purchase : How do we allow integrated? customers to purchase specific products/services?  Which ones work best? 4. Delivery : How do we deliver  Which ones are most cost- a Value Proposition to efficient? customers?  How are we integrating them 5. After sales : How do we with customer routines? provide post-purchase customer support?
  • 32. 5. Key Activities  What Key Activities categories do our Value Production Propositions Problem Solving require? Platform/Network  Our Distribution Channels?  Customer Relationships?  Revenue streams?
  • 33. 6. Key Resources  What Key types of resources Resources do our Physical Value Propositions Intellectual (brand require? patents, copyrights, data)  Our Distribution Human Channels? Financial  Customer Relationships?  Revenue Streams?
  • 34. 7. Key Partners  Who are our Key motivations for Partners? partnerships: Optimization and  Who are our key suppliers? economy Reduction of risk and  Which Key uncertainty Resources are we Acquisition of acquiring from partners? particular resources and activities  Which Key Activities do partners perform?
  • 35. types: 8. Revenue Stream Asset sale Usage fee Subscription Fees  For what value are our Lending/ Renting/ Leasing customers really willing to Licensing pay? Brokerage fees Advertising  For what do they currently fixed pricing pay? List Price  How are they currently Product feature dependent paying? Customer segment dependent Volume dependent  How would they prefer to pay? dynamic pricing Negotiation (bargaining)  How much does each Yield Management Revenue Stream contribute Real-time-Market to overall revenues?
  • 36. is your business more: 9. Cost Structure Cost Driven (leanest cost structure, low price value proposition, maximum  What are the most automation, extensive important costs outsourcing) Value Driven ( focused on inherent in our value creation, premium value proposition) business model?  Which Key characteristics: Resources are most Fixed Costs (salaries, rents, utilities) expensive? Variable costs  Which Key Activities Economies of scale are most expensive? Economies of scope
  • 37. Business Model Test Drive 1. How much do switching costs prevent your customers from churning? 2. How scalable is your business model? 3. Does your business model produce recurring revenues? 4. Do you earn before you spend? 5. How much do you get others to do the work? 6. Does your business model provide built-in protection from competition? 7. Is your business model based on a game changing cost structure?
  • 38. Business Model of Facebook
  • 40. Strategic Business Model (Barringer & Ireland 2012) Four Components of the Business Model
  • 41. Core Strategy 1 of 3  Core Strategy  The first component of a business model is the core strategy, which describes how a firm competes relative to its competitors.  Primary Elements of Core Strategy  Mission statement  Product/market scope  Basis for differentiation
  • 42. Core Strategy 2 of 3 Primary Elements of Core Strategy A firm’s mission, or mission statement, Mission describes why it exists and what its business Statement model is supposed to accomplish. Product/Market A company’s product/market scope defines the Scope products and markets on which it will concentrate.
  • 43. Core Strategy 3 of 3 Primary Elements of Core Strategy It is important that a new venture differentiate itself from its competitors in some way that is Basis of important to its customers. If a new firm’s Differentiation products or services aren’t different from those of its competitors, why should anyone try them?
  • 44. Strategic Resources 1 of 3  Strategic Resources  A firm is not able to implement a strategy without resources, so the resources a firm has affect its business model substantially.  For a new venture, its strategic resources may initially be limited to the competencies of its founders, the opportunity they have identified, and the unique way they plan to serve their market.  The two most important strategic resources are:  A firm’s core competencies  Strategic assets
  • 45. Strategic Resources 2 of 3 Primary Elements of Strategic Resources A core competency is a resource or capability that serves as a source of a firm’s competitive advantage. Core Examples include Sony’s competence in Competencies miniaturization and Dell’s competence in supply chain management. Strategic assets are anything rare and valuable that a Strategic firm owns. They include plant and equipment, Assets location, brands, patents, customer data, a highly qualified staff, and distinctive partnerships.
  • 46. Strategic Resources 3 of 3  Importance of Strategic Resources  New ventures ultimately try to combine their core competencies and strategic assets to create a sustainable competitive advantage.  This factor is one that investors pay close attention to when evaluating a business.  A sustainable competitive advantage is achieved by implementing a value-creating strategy that is unique and not easy to imitate.  This type of advantage is achievable when a firm has strategic resources and the ability to use them.
  • 47. Partnership Network 1 of 3  Partnership Network  A firm’s partnership network is the third component of a business model. New ventures, in particular, typically do not have the resources to perform key roles.  In most cases, a business does not want to do everything itself because the majority of tasks needed to build a product or deliver a service are not core to a company’s competitive advantage.  A firm’s partnership network includes:  Suppliers  Other key relationships
  • 48. Partnership Network 2 of 3 Primary Elements of Partnership Network A supplier is a company that provides parts or Suppliers services to another company. Intel is Dell’s primary suppler for computer chips, for example. Firms partner with other companies to make their business models work. An entrepreneur’s ability to Other Key launch a firm that achieves a competitive advantage Relationships may hinge as much on the skills of the partners as on the skills within the firm itself.
  • 49. Partnership Network 3 of 3 The Most Common Types of Business Partnerships
  • 50. Customer Interface 1 of 3  Customer Interface  The way a firm interacts with its customer hinges on how it chooses to compete.  For example, Amazon.com sells books over the Internet while Barnes & Noble sells through its traditional bookstores and online.  The three elements of a company’s customer interface are:  Target customer  Fulfillment and support  Pricing model
  • 51. Customer Interface 2 of 3 Primary Elements of Customer Interface Target A firm’s target market is the limited group of Market individuals or businesses that it goes after or tries to appeal to. Fulfillment and support describes the way a firm’s Fulfillment product or service reaches its customers. It also refers and Support to the channels a company uses and what level of customer support it provides.
  • 52. Customer Interface 3 of 3 Primary Elements of Customer Interface The third element of a company’s customer Pricing interface is its pricing structure. Pricing models Structure vary, depending on a firm’s target market and its pricing philosophy.
  • 53. Recap: The Importance of Business Models  Business Models  It is very useful for a new venture to look at itself in a holistic manner and understand that it must construct an effective “business model” to be successful.  Everyone that does business with a firm, from its customers to its partners, does so on a voluntary basis. As a result, a firm must motivate its customers and its partners to play along.  Close attention to each of the primary elements of a firm’s business model is essential for a new venture’s success.
  • 54. Further Reading  Scarborough, Norman, M. 2011. Essentials of Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management. 6th edition. Pearson.  Brooks, Arthur C. (2006) Social Entrepreneurship : A Modern Approach to Social Value Creation. Pearson  Barringer, Bruce R. & Ireland, R. Duane, 2011 Entrepreneurship – Successfully launching new ventures 4th edition, Pearson.  Schaper, M., Volery, T., Weber, P. & Lewis, K. 2011. Entrepreneurship and Small Business. 3rd Asia Pacific edition. John Wiley.  Osterwalder, A. & Piqneur,Y. 2011 Business Model Generation . Business Model Foundry.

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