Unit v new business model and strategy for internet economy
8,328 views
27 slides
Mar 04, 2020
Slide 1 of 27
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
About This Presentation
new business model and strategy for internet economy
Size: 265.7 KB
Language: en
Added: Mar 04, 2020
Slides: 27 pages
Slide Content
NEWBUSINESSMODEL&STRATEGY
FORINTERNETECONOMY
1
Business Model
A business model describes what a firm
will do, and how, to build and capture
wealth for stakeholders
It is a plan for the successful operation
of a business, identifying sources of
revenue, the intended customer base,
products, and details of financing.
Effective business models operationalize
good strategies -turning position and fit
into wealth
2
Four Aspects of Business Models
Revenue Sources
Cost Drivers
Investment Size
Critical Success Factors
3
Effective Business Models Require
Hard Choices
About who matters
Owners, investors, family, workers,
community
About what kind of wealth matters
Financial capital, social capital,
intellectual capital...ie., cash, good life,
rich family life, entrepreneurial impact,
social impact
About the strategy that will deliver the
wealth that matters to the stakeholders
that matter
About the structure that supports strategy
4
Good Execution is More Important
than Good Strategy!
Seeing a position or approach is
fundamentally creative
Immersion, scenarios, future search,
Constructing a strategy involves
careful analysis and planning
Executinga strategy requires
relentless discipline
5
Business Model Template
6
Strategy for Internet Economy
7
Internet and e-commerce firms
Major groups of Internet and e-commerce
firms comprising the supply side include:
Makers of specialized communications
components and equipment
Providers of communications services
Suppliers of computer components and
hardware
Developers of specialized software
E-commerce enterprises
8
9
The Web (Cluster/Platform) Strategy
Webs –not the WWW, but ‘clusters of
companies collaborating around a
particular technology’
Web –a new form of industrial
structure
Webs create powerful new ways to
think about strategy, risk, technological
uncertainty and innovation
Examples –Microsoft/Intel; Novell PC
networking system; SAP integrated IT
solutions; Netscape; Sony playstation
etc.
10
Economic Web
Two compulsory conditions: Technological Standard
& Increasing Returns
Tech standard –reduces risks allowing companies to
make irreversible investment decisions in face of
technological uncertainty
Increasing Returns –create a mutual dependence
that strengthens the web by drawing in more and
more customers and producers
11
Characteristics of the Web
Webs are not alliances –no formal relationships
between participants
Different from virtual organisations
The Pursuit of economic self-interest drives
behaviour
Each company independent and prices, markets; and
sells products autonomously
Webs are natural responses to risk and uncertainty
in turbulent environment
The safety net of the web allows a firm to focus
exclusively on activities it can offer distinctive value
Web reduces overall investment requirements; focus
investments on areas most likely to succeed;
promote multiple suppliers for bottleneck
components
12
Strategic Roles in Webs
Shapers –Focus on fluidity and opportunities
to determine or influence outcomes; mold the
environment in ways enhancing their ability
to create values [define]
Adapters –Deal with uncertainty by staying
one step ahead of other players in responding
to & anticipating environmental changes
Profound implications for strategy and tactics
(e.g. Microsoft versus Dell)
13
Success Factors for Shapers
Ownership of a key platform technology –shapes
broader architecture & long-term lock-in (IBM Versus
Microsoft/Intel)
Reliance on economic incentives to mobilise other
web participants
Active management of increasing returns dynamics
to accelerate web growth
14
Success Factors for Adapters
Early participation in winning value webs –
establish pre-emptive position in attractive
market
Aggressive competition for share within the
value web –strengthen relationship with
shapers for information
Linking or diversifying position –linking
strategy with key shapers or straddle several
webs
15
What is Distinctive about Web Strategy
New mindset required –new way of thinking about
industry structure, relationships between companies
and value creation
Unbundling and out-sourcing of undifferentiated
business activities (what about transformational
outsourcing?)
Maximising value for entire web by shapers –not just
the company (market share vs size of pie)
Strategic decision -webs to join/form & roles to play
New performance measurement
Product design satisfy customers but also appeal to
providers of complimentary products & services
Information systems –beyond the enterprise
Internet Business Model
Information Sales
Service Sales
Brokerage
Advertising
Merchant
Manufacturer (Direct)
Affiliate Community
Subscription
Utility
16
Economic potential of
the internet revolution
Reducing the cost
Manage supply chain more effectively
Easy communication
Increasing competition
Making prices more transparent
Broadening markets for buyers and sellers
Increasing the effectiveness of marketing
and pricing
Increasing consumer choice, convenience
and satisfaction in a variety of ways.
17
Revenue Sources
Advertising
Subscribers
Lead Gen / Affiliate
Selling Data
Freemium
Royalties
18
19
Freemium
Freemium is a business model, especially on the
Internet, whereby basic services are provided free of
charge while more advanced features must be paid
for.
20
Critical Success Factors
Immediacy
Proximity: Geolocation
Communication
Invest aggressively in R&D to win the
technological race against rivals
Form strategic alliances to build consensus for
favoured technological approaches
Acquire other companies with complementary
technological expertise
Hedge firm’s bets by investing sufficient
resources in mastering one or more of the
competing technologies 21
Strategic drivers of the Internet
economy
Important drivers of the Internet economy
include:
The greatest added value for products and services of
all kinds is Information. Products and service products
are essentially at par with their competitors in relations
to a product’s features.
Distance and size do not matter in the many types of
communications and transactions that can occur.
Whether the information is news, customer service, or
product availability, information is available all over the
world and accessible at any time.
Flexibility and speed are of the quintessence. Flexibility
is required in everything from ways of responding to
customers and to business models.
22
Strategic drivers of the Internet
economy
The key assets in Internet enterprises are people.
Innovation and creativity characterize companies
that are successful in the Internet era.
A statement that has been part of technology
culture since Robert Metcalf, the developer of the
Ethernet is “growth in the network causes
exponential increase in value”.
The Internet is many-to-many and not a one-to-
many network that allows marketers to deal with
customers on a one-on-one basis.
Because markers are closer to the customer, it
allows for better forecasting through behavioral
data. What customers are doing is available to
marketers long before conventional marketing
research is collected.
23
Strategic drivers of the Internet
economy
The Internet has changed the nature of transactions
in markets by shortening supply chains and making
it more efficient as cost patterns change.
Transactions and coordination costs are shrinking for
businesses and consumers are recognizing that
switching costs are low.
Customers have power in information-rich channels.
Customers, consumers, and businesses have found
their voice on the Internet.
An information economy is branded by choice and
plenty of abundance. Information is not uncommon
and is becoming more valuable as its consumers use
it.
24
Ecommerce Business
Major Ecommerce Business
Classifications
B2BEcommerce
B2CEcommerce
C2CEcommerce
C2BEcommerce
Government / Public
Administration Ecommerce
25
https://www.ecommerceceo.com/types -of-ecommerce-
business-models/
Ecommerce Business
Types Of Ecommerce Business
Revenue Models
Drop Shipping
Wholesaling and Warehousing
Private Labeling and Manufacturing
White Labeling
Subscription Ecommerce
26
https://www.ecommerceceo.com/types -of-ecommerce-
business-models/
Ecommerce Business
Types Of Ecommerce Product
Revenue Models
What Counts For Ecommerce
Single Product Model
Single Category
Multiple Category
Affiliate
Hybrid [Single Category + Affiliate]
27
https://www.ecommerceceo.com/types -of-ecommerce-
business-models/