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Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton 1 Developing a Business Model.

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1 Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton 1 Developing a Business Model

2 Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton 2 What is a business model?  A company’s unique value proposition, for customers in the form of a sustainable competitive advantage, and for stakeholders as how the firm can create value specific to their unique interests.  It presents a logical and internally consistent approach to the design and operations of the venture, and documents this approach for all stakeholders  It identifies the key performance indicators for the business  It presents the value opportunity for resource providers  It provides parameters for determining the appropriateness of strategic and tactical actions

3 The Customer Mode of Thinking The business model answers these questions in forming the basis for the unique market position the firm will seek.  What was your problem?  What was the solution you purchased?  What were the alternatives (competition)?  Why did you choose to buy what you did (better)?  How did the enterprise earn your business?  How much profit did they make on the sale? Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton 3

4 4 The Business Model Framework  The model must be reasonably simple, logical, and measurable, while still being comprehensive and able to be operationalized  How will the firm create value?  For whom will the firm create value?  What is the firm’s internal source of advantage?  How will the firm differentiate itself from competitors?  How will the firm make money?  What are the entrepreneur’s time, scope, and size ambitions?

5 Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton 5 How Will the Firm Create Value?  Addresses the products/services offered, product mix, and the relative depth and breadth of the mix.  What is the value proposition for the customer? What are they really buying? What is their need you are solving?  Primary products and/or service offerings  Broad, medium or narrow product line  A la carte or a bundled offering  Distribution channels  Internal mfg or service delivery, outsourcing, licensing, reselling, value added reselling

6 Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton 6 For Whom Will the Firm Create Value?  The nature and scope of the target market(s)  Who is the customer?  Who is the consumer?  Business-to-business and/or Business-to-consumer  Geographic scope  Transactional or relationship business

7 Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton 7 What is the Firm’s Internal Source of Advantage?  What part of the value chain leads to your advantage?  Is it valuable?  Is it rare?  Is it costly to imitate?  Is the organization organized to exploit it?

8 Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton 8 How Will the Firm Differentiate Itself?  How does the company differ from its competition in ways that are valuable to the customer?  Equal value at a lower cost Efficiency, lower cost Quality  Greater value Image Selection, features, availability Relationship/customer service

9 Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton 9 How Will the Firm Make Money?  Revenues  Price vs. volume  Repeat vs. single sale relationship  Operating leverage  Extent of fixed vs. variable costs  Breakeven point  High, medium, or low margins

10 Copyright © 2008 by Robert B. Carton 10 What are the Entrepreneur’s Ambitions?  Subsistence model  Survival by meeting basic financial obligations  Often associated with a lifestyle/hobby business  Income model  Generate a living wage  Growth model  Opportunity to continue to invest and build value  Speculative model  Proof of concept and then sell the business


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