The Role of the Business Model and
Strategy for Business
by: Jeff Schein
People will always stress that having a well researched
business plan is key before you start your business. Although
creating a business plan is often an important step in the
evolution of a business, particularly if you need financing or
you are not experienced at running a business, it is not
necessarily the essential first step. There are two key elements
that should be completed prior to the business plan:
- The business model
- The strategy
What is a Business Model?
While the word model often stirs up images of mathematical
formulas, a business model is in fact a story of how a business
works. In general terms, a business model is the method of doing
business by which a company can generate revenue. Both start-up
ventures and established companies take new products and
services to the market through a venture shaped by a specific
business model. In their paper, The Role of the Business Model
in Capturing Value from Innovation, Henry Chesbrough and Richard
S. Rosenbloom outlined the six basic elements of a business
model:
- Articulate the value proposition – the value created to
users by using the product
- Identify the market segment – to whom and for what
purpose is the product useful; specify how revenue is
generated by the firm.
- Define the value chain – the sequence of activities and
information required to allow a company to design, produce,
market, deliver and support its product or service.
- Estimate the cost structure and profit potential – using
the value chain and value proposition identified.
- Describe the position of the firm with the value network
– link suppliers, customers, complementors and competitors.
- Formulate the competitive strategy – how will you gain
and hold your competitive advantage over competitors or
potential new entrants.
Joan Magretta in her article Why Business Models Matter took
the concept of the business model a little further. Magretta
suggests every business model needs to pass two critical tests,
the narrative test and the numbers test. The narrative test must
tell a good story and explain how the business works, who is the
customer, what do they value and how a company can deliver value
to the customer. The numbers test means your profit and loss
assumptions must add up. At the most basic level, if your model
doesn’t work, then your model has failed one of the two tests.
To begin the modeling process you need to articulate a value
proposition on the product or service being provided. The model
must then describe the target market. The customer will then
value the product on its ability to reduce costs, solve a
problem or create new solutions. A market focus is needed to
identify what product attributes need to be targeted and how to
resolve product trade-offs such as quality versus cost. You also
need to identify how much to charge and how the customer will
pay.
Think of business modeling as the managerial equivalent of
the scientific method - you start with a hypothesis, which you
then test in action and revise when necessary. The business
model also plays a part of a planning tool by focusing
managements on how all the elements and activities of the
business work together as a whole. At the end of the day, the
business model should be condensed onto one page consisting of:
a diagram outlining how the business generates revenue, how cash
flows through the business and how the product flows through the
business and; a narrative describing the product/ service
components, financial projections or other important elements
not captured in the diagram.
Business Models and Strategy
It is important to note that completing a business model does
not constitute strategic planning. Strategic planning factors in
the one thing a business model doesn’t; competition.
What is strategy?
According to the Collins English Dictionary, strategy is “a
particular long-term plan for success”. For our purposes, we
will consider the essence of strategy as a formula for coping
with the competition. Competitive strategy is about being
different and the goal for a corporate strategy is to find a
position in the industry where the company is unique and can
defend itself against market forces. To do this the company must
choose a set of activities that can deliver a unique mix of
value.
Market Forces and Strategy
The determination of a strategy is rooted in determining how
a company stacks up against basic market forces, how it can
defend itself against these forces and how it can influence
these forces. Fortunately, Michael E. Porter in his article How
Competitive Forces Shape Strategy defined these market forces
for us. Known as Porter’s 5 forces they consist of:
- The industry – this is the jockeying for position among
current competitors, this can consists of price competition,
new product introduction or advertising slugfests.
- The threat of new entrants - the seriousness of the
threat of entry depends on the barriers to entry and
reaction from existing companies. There are 6 major barriers
to entry: 1) economies of scale 2) product differentiation
3) capital requirements 4) cost disadvantages independent of
size 5) access to distribution channels 6) government
policy. A new company will generally have second thoughts
about entering an industry if the incumbent has substantial
resources to fight back, the incumbent seems likely to cut
prices or industry growth is slow.
- The threat of substitute products/services - substitutes
can place a ceiling on prices that are charged and limit the
potential of an industry.
- The bargaining power of suppliers - suppliers can
squeeze profitability by increasing prices or lowering the
quality of the goods.
- The bargaining power of buyers (customers) - customers
can force down prices, demand better quality, more service
or play competitors off on each other.
Once you assess how the market forces are affecting
competition in your industry and their underlying causes, you
can identify the underlying strength and weaknesses of your
company, determine where it stands against each force and then
determine a plan of action. Plans of action may include:
- Positioning the company – match your strengths and
weaknesses to the company’s industry, build defenses against
competitive forces or find a position in the industry where
forces are the weakest. You need to know your company’s
capabilities and the causes of the competitive forces
- Influencing the balance – take the offensive, for
example innovative marketing can raise brand identification
or differentiate the product.
- Exploiting industry change – an evolution of an industry
can bring changes in competition. For example, in an
industry life-cycle growth rates change and/or product
differentiation declines; anticipate shifts in the factors
underlying these forces and respond to them.
The framework for analyzing the industry and developing a
strategy provides the road map for answering the question “what
is the potential of this business?”
Reconciling the Business Model and Strategy
I will use a short example to illustrate the difference
between a business model and strategy. Although you may think
that Wal-Mart pioneered a new business model on its road to
success, the reality is that the model was really no different
than the one Kmart was using at the time. But it was what Sam
Walton chose to do differently than Kmart, such as focusing on
small towns as opposed to large cities and everyday low prices,
that was the real reason for his success. Although Sam Walton’s
model was the same as Kmart's, his unique strategy made him a
success. |