Business Design:

Business Model

Revenue Model

How Your Business Makes Money and Charges for the Services Provided

By Vadim Kotelnikov, Inventor & Founder, Ten3 BUSINESS e-COACH – Innovation Unlimited, 1000ventures.com

"There is no victory at bargain basement prices." 

– Dwight D. Eisenhower

 

Business ModelInnovationCustomer Value PropositionCompetitive StrategiesValue Chain ManagementKnowing Your CustomersGrowth Strategies Revenue Model Economic Value Added

Business Model vs. Revenue Model

  1. A Business Model is the umbrella term used to describe the method – position in the value chain, customer selection, products, pricing – of doing business.

  2. A Revenue Model lays-out the process by which a company actually makes money by specifying how it is going to charge for the services provided.

 

 

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Business Model

New Business Model

Effective Pricing

Balanced Business System

Creating Sustainable Profit Growth

Value Proposition

 

Your company should deliver a particular customer value proposition to a definable market in order to exist. Value proposition is a description of the customer problem, the solution that addresses the problem, and the value of this solution from the customer's perspective... More

Effective Pricing

The best price is always the one that provides you with the most long-term profits. Price in terms of value rather than cost. Cost-plus pricing is  worst choice. When you start pricing more intelligently, you will have a real advantage over most of your competitors... More

 Case in Point  Xerox Corporation

Xerox Corporation's early days in the copy machine business with its Xerox Model 914 copier illustrate the importance of the business model and innovative revenue model.3

The Model 914 used the relatively new electrophotography process, which is a dry process that avoids the use of wet chemicals. In seeking potential marketing partners, the company repeatedly was turned down by the likes of Kodak, GE, and IBM, who had concluded that there was no future in the technology as seen through the lens of the then-prevalent business model. While the technology was superior to earlier copy methods, the cost of the machine was six to seven times more expensive than alternative technologies. The model of selling the equipment below cost and making up the difference by large margins in the sale of supplies was not viable because the cost of the supplies was about the same as that of the alternatives, so there was little room to maneuver.

Xerox then decided to market the new product itself and developed a new business model to do so. The new model leased the equipment to the customer at a relatively low cost and then charged a per copy fee for copies in excess of 2000 copies per month. At that time, the average business copier produced an average of only 15-20 copies per day. For this model to be profitable to Xerox, the use of copies would have to increase substantially.

Fortunately for Xerox, the quality and the convenience of the new copy technology proved itself and companies began to make thousands of copies per day. As a result, Xerox sustained a compound annual growth rate of 41% over a 12 year period. Without this business model, Xerox might not have been successful in commercializing the innovation.

 

 Discover much more in the FULL VERSION of e-Coach

Fostering the Creation of Value...

Business Model Questions...

New Revenue Models...

Customer Intimacy - a New Way of Doing Business...

 Case in Point  Dell Computers...

 Case in Point  Half.com...

 Case in Point  Xerox...

 

 

 

 

 

References:

  1. Radical Innovation, Harvard Business School

  2. The Centerless Corporation, by Bruce A.Pasternack and Albert. J. Viscio

  3. Business Models on the Web, Prof. Michael Rappa

 

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Inventor, Author & Founder – Vadim Kotelnikov

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