martes, 3 de octubre de 2017

Nuevos Modelos de Negocio - II


Una de las  entradas del primer año de este blog (en el 2015!! como pasa el tiempo)  fue sobre nuevos modelos de negocio  https://www.slideshare.net/EDUARDOLFP/nuevos-modelos-de-negocios-digitales

Un primer enfoque

En esta primera entrada el  enfoque tenia su base en la definición que podemos encontrar en la wikipedia

“modelo de negocio, también es llamado diseño de negocio o diseño empresarial, es el mecanismo por el cual un negocio busca generar ingresos y beneficios económicos. Es un resumen de cómo una compañía planifica servir a sus clientes (economía). Implica tanto el concepto de estrategia como su implantación, comprendiendo diferentes  elementos ( selección de clientes, ofertas producto, utilidad, como conservar clientes, gestión tareas….)”

Esta definición de como generar ingresos y beneficios económicos tiene una visión mas amplia que únicamente la de como monetizar, que es quizás la primera asociación que normalmente se hace cuando se habla de modelos de negocio. Es una definición mas focalizada a la globalidad, al modelo de diseño empresarial, elementos etc pero sin precisar como poder definir todos estos conceptos.  Gracias a este concepto y de esta idea luego surgieron otros posts como  

http://eduardolfp.blogspot.com.es/2016/05/disney-y-las-tropas-de-fans-un-modelo.html

Un segundo enfoque ampliado

En este nuevo post el foco está en poder concretar los conceptos que definen los modelos de negocios

En el Programa Superior en Innovacion PSIED de ICEMD dirigido por Juan Ramón Campos que he terminado recientemente y la oportunidad de presentar un caso real en Endesa me han permitido seguir aprendiendo en modelos de negocio con nuevas herramientas. También el proceso de poner el foco en el cliente, poner pasión en la definición del problema, la definición de retos, testar , aprender, retroalimentar etc me han resultado clave  para la definición de  modelos de negocio, no en vano la definición de Innovación de MIT es:

Innovación = Invención x Comercializacion

Tras este nuevo enfoque mas sustentado en metodología de innovación ( agiles, design, thinking....) llegaríamos al concepto de sostenibilidad, es decir introducir la variable tiempo a la hora la definición de modelos de negocio. En este sentido y tal y como nos indico el profesor Manuel Basera para que un modelo de negocio sea sostenible debe cumplir:

  • Solventar un problema
  • Satisfacer un deseo
  • Crear categoria

Este segundo enfoque por lo tanto pese a mantener una visión amplia al mismo permite una mayor concreción ya que su enfoque  gira sobre los conceptos:

  • Modelo: manera en que los usuarios consumen el producto o servicio
  • Monetización:  manera en que obtenemos ingresos de esas interacciones
  • Elementos de monetizaciónactores, servicios o bienes y las distintas maneras de monetización  en los entornos digitales

¿Pero como concretar todas estas ideas?

El  Business Model Navigator (Oliver Gassmann, Karolin Frankenberger y Michaela Csik), se posiciona como la fuente más importante para describir de forma sencilla el modelo de negocio de tu empresa. De hecho sus autores han identificado 55 patrones de modelos de negocio, que serán la base que utilizaremos para generar ideas de nuevos modelos de negocio, siguiendo tres posibles estrategias:
  • Transferir: Trasladar un modelo de negocio existente a un nuevo sector.
  • Combinar: Transferir y combinar más de un modelo de negocio.
  • Apalancar: Utilizar en un nuevo segmento de producto un modelo de negocio que ya está funcionando en otro producto.




Pero este modelo introduce desde mi punto de vista una componente  importante que es la de proceso:
  • en primer lugar parte del ejercicio de entender el modelo de negocio actual, interacciones, lógica del modelo etc
  • en segundo lugar abre el campo de análisis de nuevas opciones, modelos etc
  • permite obtener una visión completa y detallada a implementar, lo que evita entrar en procesos que no terminan nunca
por lo tanto permite crear "una metodología" a la hora de definir modelos de negocio junto a ofrecer 55 patrones de modelos de negocio.

Cuales son estos 55 Modelos?

En el primer post se listaban algunos modelos como

Logística / Producción, Operaciones, sistemas..aas) / Colaboración / Ecosistemas /   Contenido cadena valor integral: Netflix /  Modelos Piramidales / Broker / Modelos de acceso gratuito.  El producto eres / Marketplace / Seguridad y privacidad / Business Angels /  Big Data / Suscripción / Modelos fremium / Financieros. microcréditos o  crowdlending / Flash Sales / Los comparadores online /  Conocimiento de usuario.. User experience,  Loyalty/ Modelo basado en la Publicidad / Modelo E-Commerce: /  FundRaising Donaciones ...

y aqui estarían los 55 modelos listados


Add-On (Upsell)
Sell Extra Custom Features
Ryanair
Affiliation
Use Sellers for you to sell your products
Amazon
Aikido
Disrupt against the proposition of competition
Nintendo Wii
Auction
Bidding, Reverse Auction
Ebay
Barter
Sponsoring and Value Exchange
P&G to give away Pampers, Pepsi to import Vodka to export Cola
Cash Machine
Collect Money from customers, but pay later to suppliers
Amazon, Dell, Travel Checks
Cross Selling
Sell other products which can be relevant to customers
Shell, Tchibo
Crowdfunding
Crowd invests for a sample product
Pebble, Music Record
Crowdsourcing
Crowd thinks, delivers, chooses
P&G Connect & Develop, Cisco
Customer Loyalty
Loyalty Card Programs to collect discount balance
Airlines, Advantage Card
Digitalisation
Physical Products and Offers become immaterial
Spiegel Magazine
Direct Selling
Producer directly faces and sells to customers
Tesla, Tupperware, Dell, Vorwerk
E-Commerce
Business transactions and communications via ICT
Amazon, Würth (intelligent box to give orders autonomously when the amount of supply goes low)
Experience Selling
Offers exclusive and unique product and service experience combined with positive emotions
Starbucks, Nespresso, Ikea, Marlboro
Flatrate
Offers unlimited use with the comfort to control prices
Netflix, Spotify, flat rate telecommunications subscriptions, all inclusive tourism offers
Fractionalized Ownership
Customer owns a specific portion or usage rights of a product
Timesharing holiday resorts, Netjets (network with 8000 airplanes), Sefage (Car Sharing Initiative established in 1948)
Franchising
Franchiser offers its business concept for expansion with the resources of franchisee whereas franchisee enjoys reduced risks and established brand and business processes
McDonald’s, Pizza Hut, Marriott, Starbucks
Freemium
Free basic version to wake the interest of customer and introduce the product, Paid advanced versions with full features
Skype, Spotify, Mailchimp, LinkedIn, Dropbox
From Push-To-Pull
Put customers as the central driving factor in every operation and decision, Produce only what the customer is ready to buy and do it as efficient as it is possible without waste
Toyota, Zara, Geberit
Guaranteed Availability
Provider offers uninterrupted availability instead of ownership, Provider is responsible for achieving this including timely repair, replacement and maintenance
Hilti, Fleet Management, Otis, IBM
Hidden Revenue
Offers free or cheap service to customers, but generates revenue from ads
Free newspapers, TV, Google
Ingredient Branding
Creating a brand for a component or a feature of a product
Intel for processors, Shimano for bicycle components, Bosch vehicle components
Integrator
Offering supplies mostly by own means with minimal dependency on 3rd Party suppliers
Zara, Ford
Layer Player
Specialised products and services which usually operate in multiple industries
Paypal, TRUSTe, Dennemeyer, Outsourcing Providers
Leverage Customer Data
Improved decision making and offering capabilities from the insights gained from raw customer raw
Google, Amazon, Facebook, Twitter
License
Focusing and investing on the commercialisation of intellectual properties
Mickey Mouse, IBM, BASF, ARM Limited
Lock-In
Offering products and services which are attached to intensive costs, time and learning if the customer wants to move to another provider
Software, Operating Systems, Gillette, Nespresso, Innovative external interfaces of hardware and mobile devices
Long Tail
Offering a large portfolio of products, not only the ones most people buy, but also niche products
Amazon, Ebay, iTunes, Netflix
Make More Of It
Offering core competencies to others externally
Porsche Consulting, Porsche Engineering, Festo, AWS
Mass Customisation
Customised Products but still in Mass Production, usually established with modular designs and components
Dell, Automobile Industry, Apple Watch with various bands, Levi’s, mymuesli
No Frills
Cheapest prices by offering unusual, but still essential version of products
Ford’s T-Modell, Southwest Airlines, Aldi, McFit, McDonald’s
Open Business Model
Involving external business partners for open research, development and innovation without detailed planning, P&G’s Connect+Develop to build new product ideas
Eli Lilly to build InnoCentive to solve complex scientific problems, IBM’s investments on Linux
Open Source
Products are built by community, Revenue doesn’t come directly from the product, but from the services around it
Mozilla, Red Hat, Wikipedia, Local Motors
Orchestrator
Company focuses only on its core competence, everything else is provided by third parties, but the company is also excelled to administer and integrate the activities of third party providers
Nike, Bharti Airtel, Li & Fung
Pay Per Use
Customer is charged based on her effective use of services and products
Pay-Per-View TV Offers, Pay-Per-Click Advertisement, Car2Go, Ally Financial’s Pay-Per-Risk Advertisement
Pay What You Want
Customer decides how much she wants to pay for a given service or product
One World Everybody Eats, Radiohead, Noisetrade, Humble Bundle
Peer-to-Peer
Company enables business transactions between private persons
eBay, Zopa, Airbnb, Uber, Upwork
Performance-based Contracting
Client is charged based on the monetary benefit it received from the offer or based on successful delivery of complex/risky offers
Rolls-Royce airplane motors, BASF Coatings, Xerox
Razor and Blade
Base component of the offer is either cheap or free of charge, but the complementary components to be able continue using the product is more expensive
Lamp oils from Standard Oil Company, Gillette, Printer Inks, Nespresso
Rent Instead Of Buy
Customer rents the product instead of buying it which frees the customer to do capital intensive investments to use the product
Saunders System, Xerox, CWS-boco
Revenue Sharing
Strategical partnership and collaboration to increase revenues in a win-win situation
CDNow, iTunes, AppStore, Groupon, Consultancy Industry
Reverse Engineering
Detailed Analysis of competitor’s products, services and business models to exploit the gained knowhow for its own business
Brilliance China Auto, Software, War industry
Reverse Innovation
Innovation and R&D are executed in developing countries to meet the extreme needs of developing countries, and then the offer is brought to developed countries
General Electric, Dacia Logan, Nokia, Haier
Robin Hood
Earn more from privileged customer segment, but supply more to unprivileged customer segment which may not otherwise afford the offer
Aravind Eye Care System, TOMS Shoes, One Laptop Per Child
Self-Service
Customer is actively involved in the delivery process of the offer, so thanks to the saved costs the company can further invest or reduce its prices
Supermarkets, restaurants, Ikea, Backwerk, Ibis Budget
Shop-in-Shop
As the name implies, this is about opening a business or a store (rent or franchise) inside another business or store
Bosch, Tschibo, Amazon Marketplace
Solution Provider
Offering not only a product, but also a turn-key solution around customer’s problem, so the customer can focus on its own core business
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen, Würth, Tetra Pak, 3M Services, Geek-Squad
Subscription
Recurring services or deliverables in regular time intervals
Salesforce, Blacksocks, Dollar Shave Club, Mailchimp, Entrepreneur Magazine
Supermarket
Offers a large spectrum of product to fulfil many requirements of the customer at one place
Toys"R"Us, Merrill Lynch, MediaMarkt, King Kullen Grocery Company
Target The Poor
Offers are targeted to the bottom of income pyramid, they are usually designed to cover minimal, but still essential needs of customers
Hindistan Unilever, Grameen Bank, Tata Nano, Walmart
Trash-To-Cash
Exploit recycled material to build new products with reduced costs, Give the customer good conscience to use your product
Freitag lab. AG, Greenwire, Emeco
Two-Sided-Market
Platform concept where the suppliers and customers are brought together
Diners Club, Ebay, Amazon, Zappos, Groupon, Facebook, Google
Ultimate Luxery
Offers are targeted to the top of income pyramid, they are usually unique and suit for self-realisation needs of customers, Focus on branding, events, highest quality standards associated with large investments which are covered with high margin of sales prices
Lamborghini, Jumeirah Group, Abbot Downing, Apple, Various watch producers
User Designed
Gives consumers the ability and infrastructure to design, produce, sell and market their own custom products
Spreadshirt, Lego Factory, Ponoko, Dreamheels, Createmytattoo
White Label
Offers no-name Products to vendors without any branding, so the vendors define their branding and pricing, focuses mainly on production and distribution optimisation
Foxconn, Richelieu Foods, Printing-In-A-Box

2 comentarios:

  1. Excelente informacion muchas gracias.
    De hecho vengo de leer algunas estrategias de modelos de negocios en modelosdenegocios.es y la verdad es que es un tema interesante.

    ResponderEliminar
  2. Odelo de negocio, también es llamado diseño de negocio o diseño empresarial, es el mecanismo por el cual un negocio busca generar ingresos y beneficios económicos. Nombres Para Negocio De Tacos De Guisado
    Es un resumen de cómo una compañía planifica servir a sus clientes (economía).

    ResponderEliminar