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Do you have a business already, but want to optimise it according to the needs of your customers?
Well, then it’s probably time to develop a business model.
A sound business model is vital for any business.
It nails down:
- who your customers are, in which market you operate
- who your partners are
- which costs you have
- where your revenues come from, in which activities you engage
- how you create and deliver value to your customers
In this post, you’ll learn about the pillars of developing a business model.
You’ll learn:
- which questions you have to address when you build a new business
- how to empathise with your customers to come up with innovative ideas
- why you need to know what your customers think to themselves
- how writing short stories helps you come up with business ideas
- why Skype is free
A business model starts with your customer groups, value propositions and market channels.
There’s a business for just about everything these days: Nestlé snacks, Nike apparel, the brand of underwear you’ve got on right now.
And though these businesses seem very different, they’ve all got one thing in common – they create and deliver value for customers.
It all starts with a business model that defines a market of customers for whom a product creates value.
Element 1: Customer Groups
Customers are at the heart of any good business model – after all, a business can’t survive without them.
There are 2 main categories:
- Mass market
- Niche market
Category #1: Mass market
Mass market businesses cater to a very large market of customers with similar needs (i.e. toilet paper or milk).
Category #2: Niche market
Niche market businesses reach out to a smaller group of customers with specific interests (i.e. a Christian book store).
Element 2: Value Proposition
This outlines the problem that your product solves, or, in other words, the need it fulfills for your customer.
Your value proposition should also demonstrate why your product is worth choosing over others.
The value of your product can derive from one of many factors.
Stunning design might imbue your product with aesthetic appeal that beats out the competition (i.e. Apple).
Or customers might be drawn to the risk reduction that your product offers, which is often the case with IT services.
Or perhaps your product’s performance holds all the appeal – a computer that’s faster and more powerful, for instance, offers considerable value to customers.
Element 3: Market Channels
Next your business model needs an outline of the channels that you’ll use to reach out to and engage with your customers.
There are a wide range of options.
You can establish your own channels:
- a storefront
- a website
- a sales team
Or you can create channels through business partners, like a shop that stocks your product (i.e. a wholesaler).
Element 4: Customer Relationships
When reaching out to your customers, there’s more to consider than just the channels you use.
The tone and style of your outreach is equally important.
And this is why your business model should take customer relationships into account.
The relationships you build with your clients is crucial, as it’ll determine how they perceive the value of your company.
Will you give your communication with customers a personalised touch?
Or will you automate all your emails?
Or you could do a mix of the two.
Say you’re an IT company.
Customers with a particular problem might need personal assistance, while regular customers could receive automated emails with upcoming deals.
Self-service, an approach incorporated by Ikea, is another option.
Other companies even use a co-creation model, where they create value by joining forces with their customers.
Just think of Amazon, where customers write book reviews, creating value for other customers selling books online.
Element 5: Revenue Streams
If your customers are the heart of your business, revenue streams will be the veins and arteries that keep things running.
There are 3 ways to create revenue:
- Transaction revenues
One-time payments, like when you pay for a cup of coffee. - Recurring revenues
Repeating payments, like the monthly subscriptions (i.e. Netflix, Spotify, Disney+). - Usage fees
These fees depend on how much a customer actually uses your service (i.e. your phone plan).
Element 6: Key Resources
Your business model should also set out how your company will access the resources it needs.
Think of these resources as the nutrients that’ll help your company grow and thrive.
There are 3 kinds of resources you’ll need to gain access to:
Resource #1: Physical resources
They include the materials, equipment or buildings you’ll need to run your business.
Small boutiques require a shopfront and cash registers, while consumer giants like Costco and Ikea count massive warehouses among their physical resources.
Resource #2: Human resources
Human resources are your staff – that is, the people you’ve selected because of the skills, experience and qualities they have that’ll make your business succeed.
Marketing agencies, for example, depend on the creative people in their staff.
Resource #3: Intellectual resources
These include copyrights and patents – things that companies like Microsoft and Adobe rely on.
Element 7: Key Activities
Key activities, partnerships and a cost structure are vital aspects of a business model.
Just as we need to eat, breathe and sleep to survive, your business needs to perform a set of critical activities to succeed.
These key activities can be considered in terms of 3 broad categories:
- Production,
- Problem-solving
- Network or platform hosting
Manufacturing a smartphone or cooking a pizza are examples of production activities.
Consultancy is an example of a problem-solving activity, where ideas and recommendations are developed.
Network or platform hosting are the key activities of internet companies like eBay and AirBnB.
Alongside key activities, partnerships are another indispensable aspect of your business model.
Element 8: Key Partners
To run your business, you’ll need to team up with others.
Partnerships are essential to some of the world’s biggest brands (i.e. Apple partners with Foxconn to produce their iPhones).
Partnerships are also a great way to reduce risk.
Take the Blu-Ray data-storage format, for instance.
Several electronics companies decided to develop a standard format together.
This provided each company with a relative level of security.
If each company had developed their own format, they would have run the risk of being outperformed by the competition, and having their format displaced.
Element 9: Cost Structure
A business model must include a cost structure, too.
A cost structure defines where and what costs arise in your business.
Some businesses are cost-driven, while others are value-driven.
Cost-driven business models are based on the principle that costs should be kept as low as possible.
This can be achieved by reducing the amount of service provided to your customers by using automated systems.
Jetstar is an example of a cost-driven business.
Private airlines, on the other hand, represent a value-driven business model.
This approach focuses less on keeping costs low and more on offering customers a high-value product that justifies the higher prices.
Empathize with your customers to discover what they really need.
Being an entrepreneur is all about taking risks and diving into the unknown.
Just as a designer might anticipate a new trend in fashion by creating something that hasn’t been done before, it’s your job to dream up something that doesn’t yet exist.
This is no small feat, but there’s one tool you can use to get those creative juices flowing – customer insights.
By learning about what your customers really value, you can discover niches with untapped business potential.
Take Jetstar, for instance.
They recognised that lower-income customers yearned to travel by plane.
So they created a business model that took advantage of the potential in the lower-price segment.
Flexicar is another business that used customer insights to find a new niche.
They put themselves into their customers’ shoes and discovered that there was a huge demand for rental cars in metropolitan areas, if only they came without the maintenance and insurance costs.
So Flexicar created a yearly membership for their customers, allowing them to rent cars at an hourly rate.
So how can you get inside your customers’ heads like Jetstar and Flexicar did?
Empathy-map method
Try using the empathy-map method.
Start by drawing a big X on a flip chart.
- Top: write what your potential customers might think and feel when they use your product.
- Right: write what they see.
- Left: what they hear.
- Bottom: what they say and do.
This way, you’ll have mapped out every aspect of your customer’s experience.
Now, combine this map with customer personas.
This is a fictional profile of your ideal customers outlining their demographic details, including their age, marital status, income and state of employment.
With your map and your ideal personas ready, it’s time to ask some key questions about what they think, feel, see, hear, say and do.
- What emotions do your customers experience?
- What do they think or feel that they don’t share with anyone else?
- How does their environment look like?
- What kind of people are they surrounded by?
- How do those people influence them?
- What do they hear from their wives, husbands, friends and colleagues?
- What do they tell other people?
- And, finally, how do they act in public?
This comprehensive set of questions will allow you to uncover wishes and needs that your customers might not even realise they have.
And these latent wishes and needs may become the key ingredients to your business’s success.
Get inspiration for your business by writing scenarios with your customer as the good guy.
Just as a scriptwriter dreams up a compelling story filled with complex characters, you can bring your business model to life by writing out business scenarios.
There are 2 main writing approaches you can use to create these scenarios.
Approach #1: Come up with straightforward scenarios that your customers might face
Take your empathy-map and use it as your inspiration to write a short text about each of your customer personas, detailing their needs, aspirations, goals and worries.
These scenarios should be about 300 words each.
Okay, now what?
Well, let’s say you’re a telecom operator keen on taking your GPS technology to the next level.
You might want to create the following scenarios featuring your customers as characters: Tourists visiting Rome without planning their day and having to rely on guidance from their GPS.
Or a young entrepreneur running a small home-delivery service using her GPS to navigate shipments to her clients.
Approach #2: Imagine the world your customers might face in the future
For example, if you’re a tech company, why not write a scenario about the future of public transport?
Consider how today’s emerging technology – from big data to AI to the internet of things – will change the way we get to work or drop our children off at school in 50 years time.
- Will we still need train drivers? Or will intelligent systems take their place?
- Will WiFi on underground trains become the norm?
- What about new tools that allow us to track our children’s paths as they head home from school?
While building these forward-looking business scenarios around your customer personas, you’ll find the inspiration you need to create business models that don’t just solve today’s problems, but are flexible enough to solve tomorrow’s, too.
Writing business scenarios isn’t the only way you can get inspired.
Successful brands are another great source of inspiration.
Freemium and open-source models are disrupting business today.
Imagine you’re living in Melbourne and your sister has just moved to Gold Coast.
How do you keep in touch with her?
Expensive long-distance phone calls?
The occasional email? Nope.
Chances are, you use Skype.
Ever wondered why this service, which provides so much value, is free?
Freemium model
Well, Skype’s founders put themselves in your shoes, learned what you needed and wanted, and then built their business model: freemium.
The freemium model means customers can use a service for free, with the option to pay for more advanced or comfortable services.
Essentially, these premium customers cover the costs of free users.
This is the case at Skype, where a large user base can take advantage of the basic product for free.
Customers who opt to pay more get more value, such as the ability to call landlines.
The freemium model works particularly well for web companies, but could be applied to any business as long as the pricing is viable.
So how do you make sure freemium will work for you?
Well, you’ll need to determine the average costs that free users will generate, as well as the rate at which they convert to paying customers.
These numbers will help you decide how much you need to charge for premium options to make your business profitable.
Open-source model
A clever variation on the freemium model is the open-source model.
Let’s look at software company Red Hat.
They knew that they could build a strong business around free, open-source software if they offered customer support and malware testing alongside it.
Today, Red Hat provides free software created by their community of passionate open-source developers.
You can get this software for free as a self-service product.
But customers also have the option to pay a yearly fee to Red Hat for their support, maintenance and upgrades.
The key difference between this and Skype’s freemium model is that Red Hat’s software is provided by developers who work for free.
There’s one more business model to consider.
It’s called the long-tail model, and we can learn a lot from it.
Long-tail models use strong platforms to create a community of customers that double as creators.
Who hasn’t heard their older family members complain that, back in the good old days, life was simply better?
It’s true that things were simpler.
Back then, there’re a few standard products for everybody.
Today, on the other hand, there’s a huge variety of brands offering just about every product.
That’s why you can consider selling a small variety of products to a large number of people.
This is the basis of the long-tail model, which helps businesses take a market lead in particular industries.
Take the book-publishing industry, for example.
Typically, a small variety of hit manuscripts are published and then distributed to a large number of people in large quantities.
But in recent years, platforms like Lulu.com have disrupted this model by publishing a wide variety of niche literature – but on a small scale.
Inventory costs are kept low by printing books on demand, which, in turn, keeps revenue up.
Long-tail businesses can succeed if they have a strong platform for customer outreach.
In Lulu’s case, people who submitted their works also became customers, as they also read books offered on the platform.
Lulu created a tight-knit online community where authors could publish, distribute and sell their books, as well as find and buy others’ work themselves.
Another example is Lego.
The company gives customers the chance to design their own figures, buildings and vehicles – they can even design the packaging.
For this to succeed, Lego built up an online platform and community where customers could design their products and place orders for existing products.
By opening up the means of production and distribution to the individual user, these long-tail businesses show that, today, anybody can be a designer, writer and creator.
The Key Takeaways
So the key is that successful companies are built on business models that take just about everything into consideration, from your customers to your pricing to your communication and resources.
By stepping into your customers’ shoes and exploring innovative variations on different business models, you can find the inspiration you need to create a blueprint for a business that adds value to your customers’ lives.