Showing posts with label Cost advantage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cost advantage. Show all posts

Saturday, May 30, 2009

The Business Model Cost Structure

All components of a business model have related costs and the size and behavior of the costs provide an indication on the flexibility and scalability of the business model. As all managers know, lowering cost with $1 has a greater impact on the bottom line than increasing the revenue with $1 as revenue almost always comes with an associated cost.

Having a low cost structure is a strong competitive advantage which market leaders in industry after industry recognize, when companies with low cost business models enter their markets. In the steel industry the mimimills took on traditional smelters, in automobile manufacturing standardized Japanese cars won out over customized vehicles, "no frills" airlines such as Southwest Airlines or Ryanair took down traditional airlines such as US Airways and Swissair, open source software has taken large market shares within several software areas, and a hot topic right now is the struggle of traditional newspaper companies as a consequence of low cost online substitutes. See separate post here

Online companies with low costs structures are currently disrupting traditional industries and have created some very high operating margin businesses, with Craigslist perhaps the most referenced example, generating an estimated $100mm in annual revenues with an operating margin of 90%.

The Business Model Framework
The business model concept is a good framework to identify where costs arise, and how it relates to the creation and capturing of value for customers and other value recipients. Identifying significant costs and assets needed, relating to each component of the business model, provides an overview that can be used to improve the existing model or completely alter it.

Not only a number
When doing the cost analysis in relation to each business model component it is important to identify underlying cost drivers, relationships between different costs and the behavior in terms of size, growth, volatility, and whether it is linear, degressive or progressive in relation to increasing activities. This will answer an important question on how the business model will correspond to change, and how predictable that is, and can be used to find ways to balance the need for growth while managing costs and risks.

Knowing how much things costs and how it will change over time is the only way of maintaining a rational cost structure. Also knowing how choices in the different business model components affects costs in other components is a great starting point for business model innovation.

General questions once the full picture is known
Few if any managers and executives have visibility of the costs associated with the different parts of the business model. Especially in times of cost reduction it often ends up cutting too deeply in areas that are critical to the business while leaving money on the table in areas that are less critical. Once the different major costs are identified you can start question each of the business model components:
  • How can this be performed differently at lower cost, or even be eliminted?
  • What companies are focusing on low-cost alternatives in this particular business model component but perhaps in another industry?
  • How could collaboration with another actor lower or eliminate costs?
Below are some examples on more specific questions:

Customers and Value propositions
Do we need to serve all existing customers or market segments? Are some of the segments more costly? What if we configure our value proposition differently? What if we reduced performance, eliminated features, changed the mix of value propositions, adjusted the level of service, and eliminated expensive value propositions exposed to price competition? Would it be possible to create synergies between different value propositions? What if we changed the way or time of delivery? What if we employed or changed to other channels of delivery?

Resources and activities
What if we used other raw materials? Shifted location? Changed specifications for purchased components? Lowered wages paid, amenities provided to employees or training? What if we replaced owning of IT systems and software, and replace it with software as services? What if we abandoned unused patents, or sell and license them back? What if we outsourced development, marketing or installation? What if we invested in new processes? Automation? Simplification? Elimination? Centralization? Standardization? Shared Services? Can we create synergies between different activities or use resources in a more efficient ways?

Partners and relationships:
What if we change specifications? Quality? The number of partners? The type of partnerships? What if we partner with upstream, downstream or horizontal actors? Configure the value network in a different way? Etc.


Even though the cost side of a business model to a large extent determines flexibility and scalability, it is seldom discussed in relation to business model innovation. Growth in revenues is of course important but it’s only half of the value creation equation.


Further reading:

External links:


Saturday, March 7, 2009

Control mechanisms in business models

Developing a successful business model without strong control mechanisms will only generate temporary profits. The purpose of control mechanisms in business models is to protect the created values and profit streams from being reduced by competitors, partners or strong customers.

The last decades have shown a rapid growth in customer power at the same time as new technology and services are being replaced faster. Even though control always has been an important part of the business model, today it is crucial. Predictability is an important factor in analyzing business models, and the greater control mechanisms, the greater the predictability. It is common that more than one control mechanism is used to protect the profit stream from being reduced.

Different types of control mechanisms are used more in some business models and industries and less in other. An important thing to remember is that the goal should be to choose the control mechanisms that maximize the value, not the ones that maximize the protection.

Different control mechanisms
The examples below are simplifications to exemplify different mechanisms.
  • an implemented standard (Adobe)
  • a strong position in the value network (Coca-Cola)
  • an end-customer interface (Microsoft)
  • scale of users and partners (Google)
  • scale in purchasing (Wal-Mart)
  • a customer base with switching costs (Microsoft)
  • a large development community (Linux)
  • a strong brand (Louis Vuitton)
  • a development lead (Intel)
  • a short product development cycle (Zara)
  • a strong IPR portfolio (IBM)
  • a cost advantage (Ikea)
  • contractual agreements (Apple)

Using control mechanisms in business models is not the same as controlling each part of the business model
Increasingly companies are using open business models for collaborative and external innovation, product development, content creation and commercialization. Still, companies using these models, need to control parts of their business models, to protect the values and profit streams that are being created from being reduced by competitors, partners or strong customers.