Venture Models Flashcards
What is a venture model?
the essence of a viable venture; how you create value for customers and society
Business Model Canvas
customer segments, value propositions, channels, customer relationships, revenue streams, key resources, key activities, key partnerships
Building block: customer sgement
determine the customer segment you will target first (early adapters) and list existing alternatives
Building block: customer sgement
determine the customer segment you will target first (early adapters) and list existing alternatives (Netflix: current customers, families, movie buffs)
Building block: problem
describe top 1-3 problems your customer needs solved; list other user roles that may interact with your venture (Netflix: too long to get movies, limited queue)
Building block: unique value proposition
a simple, clear message of what problem we are solving or need we are satisfying; focus on finished story benefits; answer what, who, and why (Netflix: blockbuster in your living room)
Building block: solution
top features or capabilities for each problem (Netflix: streaming service with many movies)
Building block: channels (marketing)
inbound (let customers find you through blog, webinars) (N: let people blog about streaming)
outbound (push to reach customers through TV ads, cold calling) (N: ads on envelope)
Building block: cost structure
(can signal branding and positioning)
cost driven: minimize costs whenever possible (Southwest)
value driven: focus on premium value proposition and personalized service (luxury hotels)
Building block: revenue streams
how a company makes money
transaction revenues: one-time purchase
recurring revenues: ongoing payments
Building block: key metrics
1-2 measurable and trackable activities that will drive usage of your product or service (measurable goals) (N: create streaming platform, get 1 mil customers)
Building block: unfair advantage
anything that cannot be easily copied or bought by your competitors (insider info, expert endorsements, dream team, personal authority, large network effects, community, existing customers (N), organic SEO ranking)
channel phases
path to customer
awareness, evaluation (how to help customers evaluate your product), purchase, delivery, after sales
ways to generate revenue
asset sale: phone case (amazon) usage fee: hotel rooms subscription fee: gym membership lending/renting: zipcar licensing: movies brokerage: real estate advertising: TV ads
types of cost structures
fixed
variable
economies of scale
economies of scope
fixed pricing
predetermined based on static variables (ex. netflix, or ISPs)
dynamic pricing
based on market conditions (ex. seafood)
fixed costs
not dependent on the quantity of goods or services produced (ex. building rent, salaries)
variable costs
vary with the quantity of goods or services produced (ex. hourly labor, materials costs)
economies of scale
as more products are produced, buying in bulk leads to lower average costs (higher output leads to lower unit cost) (ex. Walmart buying in bulk)
economies of scope
average cost of production decreases when there is a greater variety of goods produced (product unit cost lowers are you have more product lines–diversification) (Proctor & Gamble with salaried employees for hygiene product lines)
unbundled business model
divide business into separate entities to focus on one (customer relationship, product innovation, infrastructure business) (ex. banking and tel-com)
the long tail business model
offers a large number of niche products (ex. netflix, lulu.com)
multi-sided platforms
bring together two distinct but interdependent groups and facilitate interaction between them (ex. metro–free newspaper for readers and ad companies)
free business model
at least one customer segment benefits from a free offer
multisided w/ advertising (Metro)
freemium (some convert to paid) (skype)
bait & hook (phone for free, pay for service)
open business model
companies use this to create and capture value by collaborating with outside partners outside in (using outside ideas or tech) (P & G Pringles Prints) inside out (providing partners with idle assets in your company) (GSK patent pools)
ways to deliver value to customer
brand/status (BMW) price (southwest) cost reduction (salesforce CRM) risk reduction (service guarantee or warranty) accessibility (NetJets) convenience (iTunes) newness (cell phones) performance (PC computers) customization (lego kits) design (fashion industry)
types of channels
direct: sell to your customer directly
indirect: form strategic partnerships with larger companies to leverage their channel and credibility
automated: amazon
customer relationship business
customer centered, few big players dominate
product innovation business
employee centered, many small businesses
infrastructure business
cost focused, few big players dominate
why long tail
democratization of tools of production, distribution, and decreasing costs to supply