2. OBJECTIVES:
apply the process in creating simple start-up home
based business
analyze the preparation of a simple home-based start-
up business
do the business experimentation – the business
model
3. Understanding the key terms:
1.Business model refers to a company's plan for making a
profit. It identifies the products or services the business plans
to sell, its identified target market, and any anticipated
expenses.
2.Value proposition - a description of the goods or services that
a company offers and why they are desirable to customers or
clients, ideally stated in a way that differentiates the product
or service from its competitors.
3.Startup costs are the expenses incurred during the process
of creating a new business.
4.Pre-opening startup costs include a business plan, research
expenses, borrowing costs, and expenses for technology.
4. 5.Post-opening startup costs include advertising, promotion,
and employee expenses.
6.Marketing strategy refers to a business's overall game plan
for reaching prospective consumers and turning them into
customers of the products or services the business provides. A
marketing strategy contains the company’s value proposition,
key brand messaging, data on target customer demographics,
and other high-level elements.
7.Demand is an economic principle referring to a consumer's
desire to purchase goods and services and willingness to pay a
price for a specific good or service.
8.Investment is an asset or item that is purchased with the hope
that it will generate income or appreciate the in value at some
point in the future.
5. 9. Appreciation refers to an increase in the value of an asset
over time.
10.Marketing costs are all expenses that the company makes
to market and sell its products and develop and promote its
brand.
A business model is not a business plan
It is a common misunderstanding to think of business modeling
as a one-page business plan.
A business plan is a document with a specific aim. It contains a
bunch of assumptions about your business. It also contains
financial projections about the business for the next 3-5 years.
However, those assumptions can be hardly tested. The business
plan thus remains a document that lives in the imaginary world.
6. Written to impress friends
and potential investors not for
any use for experimentation.
As we will see the primary
purpose of business modeling is
about experimentation. Another
misconception around business
models is to confuse them with
the monetization strategy or the
revenue model of a company.
While this is an essential piece of
the puzzle, it is just one of the
components of a successful
business model.
7. Understanding Business Models
Creating a business model is essential, whether you are starting
a new venture, expanding into a new market, or changing your
go-to-market strategy. You can use a business model to capture
fundamental assumptions and decisions about the opportunity
in one place, setting the direction for success.
A business model is a high-level plan for profitably operating a
business in a specific marketplace. A primary component of the
business model is the value proposition. This is a description of
the goods or services that a company offers and why they are
desirable to customers or clients, ideally stated in a way that
differentiates the product or service from its competitors.
8. A new enterprise's business model should also cover projected
startup costs and financing sources, the target customer for the
business, marketing strategy, a review of the competition, and
projections of revenues and expenses. The plan may also define
opportunities in which the business can partner with other
established companies.
When evaluating company investment, the investor should find out
exactly how it makes its money. This means looking through the
company's business model. Admittedly, the business model may
not tell you everything about a company's prospects. But the
investor who understands the business model can make better
sense of the financial data. Company and product builders must
think from the outside in, focusing on market needs and what
matters most to customers.
9. Successful businesses have business models that allow them to
fulfill client needs at a competitive price and a sustainable cost.
Over time, many businesses revise their business models from time
to time to reflect changing business environments and market
demands.
Business models are “at heart, stories — stories that explain how
enterprises work. A good business model answers the following
questions:
1.Who is the customer?
2.What does the customer value?’
3.How do we make money in this business?
4.What is the underlying economic logic that explains how we can
deliver value to customers at an appropriate cost?
10. Establishing this foundation guides the next planning tool — your
product roadmap.
Two primary levers of a company's business model:
1.Pricing which is the process whereby a business sets the price at
which it will sell its products and services. It may be part of the
business's marketing plan.
2.Product Costs which include materials, labor, production
supplies and factory overhead. Cost of the labor required to
deliver a service to a customer is also considered a product cost.
Product costs related to services should
include things like compensation, payroll taxes and employee
benefits.
11. A company can raise prices, and it can find inventory at reduced
costs. Both actions increase gross profit. Many analysts consider
gross profit to be more important in evaluating a business plan. A
good gross profit suggests a sound business plan. If expenses are
out of control, the management team can correct it. Companies
that run on the best business models are more profitable.
The Key components of a business model should include:
1. your target customers, the market
2.organization strengths and challenges
3.essential elements of the product
4.how it will be sold
12. Here is a list of essential components included in a business model:
Components Definition
Vision High-level introduction to the company and business
model
Key objectives Definition of the top-level goals and how they will be
measured
Customer targets and
challenges
Description of the different types of customers to be
targeted and their pain points
Solution How the product will solve those pain points
Value The key characteristics that differentiate the product
offering
Pricing A view into what the solution will cost and how it will be
sold
Messaging Explanation of why the offering will serve a customer’s
pain points
Go-to-market Channels that will be used to reach and sell to customers
Investment required Costs required to make the solution successful
Growth opportunity Identified ways the business will grow
13. Seven Key Elements of the business
model
1. Key partners mean that you and a company that you have no direct
competition with, industry wise, will partner together in ways that
will benefit the both of you.
14. Example: To maintain the quality of your product, you can
partner with a best peanut butter supplier to produce fillings
for your bread business products that you yourself may not be
able to make. In return, you have a contract to pay for these
products that your partner has made you.
2.Key activities represent what the company must do to make
the business model work. These activities can be producing a
product or providing a service, or a mix of both.
If your business focuses on production of a product, your
activities may include learning more about the customers and
new production techniques to improve the product.
15. Example: If you own a restaurant, some of your activities may
be to experiment on new recipes to provide your customers
with new dishes to bring new customers or provide more
varied options for your customers.
3.Key resources – describes the most important assets
required to make a business model work. These are the
resources that allow an enterprise to create and offer a Value
Proposition, reach markets, maintain relationships with
Customer Segments, and earn revenues.
4 Categories of Key Resources:
1.Physical – Buildings, vehicles, machines, raw goods, etc.
2.Intellectual – Brand, proprietary knowledge, patents,
partnerships, etc.
16. 1.Human – Creativity, experience, etc.
2.Financial – Cash, credit, stock, etc.
4. Distribution channel is to provide a link between production
and consumption. A distribution channel can be very simple,
with just two layers (producer and consumer). A distribution
channel can also be very complicated, with several levels.
17. What factors should be taken into account in choosing the best
distribution channel?
1)Nature of the product
Perishable, Perishable/fragile? A product with a short-life
Customised? A direct distribution approach often works best for
a product that the end consumer wants providing to a distinct
specification
Desired image of the product
Type of product – e.g. convenience, shopping, speciality
2)The Market
Is it geographically spread?
Does it involve selling overseas
The extent and nature of the competition – which distribution
channels and intermediaries do competitors use?
18. 3)The Business
Size and scope – e.g. can it afford an in-house sales force?
Marketing objectives – revenue or profit maximisation?
Does it have established distribution network or does it need to
extend its distribution option
How much control does it want over distribution? The longer the
channel, the less control is available
4) Legal issues
Are there limitations on sale?
What are the risks if an intermediary sells the product to an
inappropriate customer?
5.Customer segment are the community of customers or businesses
that you are aiming to sell your product or services to.
19. Customers can be segmented into distinct groups based on needs,
behaviors and other traits that they share. A customer segment may
also be defined through demographics such as age, ethnicity,
profession, gender, etc or on their psychographic factors such as
spending behavior, interests, and motivations. An organization can
choose to target a single group or multiple groups through its
product and service.
6.Cost structure defines all the costs and expenses that your company
will incur while operating your business model. This final step in the
process is important, because it will help your team decide whether to
pivot or proceed.
7.Revenue stream elaborates the earnings a business gets by
subtracting the costs from the revenue generated from each customer
segment. It represents the cash, not the profit, that the business has
20. present. Specifying the pricing and projected lifecycles of the list of
resources. If the cost of designing and producing a product is more
than what the customer is willing to pay for it or greater than the
revenues the product will rake in before its lifecycle ends, then it does
not make business sense to go ahead with the product.
A business model implies the understanding of operations,
customer acquisition, retention, supply chain management, besides
monetization. A designed business model of in every organization,
there will be a piece that plays a more critical role compared to others.
For example, the business model for an Services business may identify
benefits from an arrangement for referrals to and from a printing
company.
For instance, a vital component of the Julie’s Bakeshop business model
is its franchising strategy. For other companies like McDonald’s, the
key to its business
21. model success is the heavily franchised restaurants that helped the
company scale up all over the world.
Each company will develop a unique model among the many types of
business models which is what makes your company robust in the
long-run!
There are many types of business models. Each one varies
considerably based on the type of organization and offering. For
example, a manufacturing company will have a very different model
than an advertising agency. Even within a specific industry, business
models vary.
Here are a few common business models used by technology
companies:
1.Subscription 4. Affiliate
2.Transactional 5. Retail Sales
3.Freemium
23. In the real world of business scenario, it is very important to look at
the long-term vision of the company considering all the messy,
unpredictable, noisy and ambiguous business environment and
settings. Meaning, as an entrepreneur plays the marketing tools and
strategies on hand, he has to do understand the economic condition
that will directly or indirectly affect the business applying the
strategies of simple thinking tools, qualitative and quantitative
analysis with focus to attain the long-term vision aimed by the
company.
The Primary aim of a business model:
1)to create a sustainable chain
2)able to unlock value for several players in a market, industry or
niche
24. For instance, when Bo’s Coffee started it didn’t look to dominate the
whole market. It started from a niche. As Pether Thiel put it in his
book, Zero to One. Bo’s Coffee began as follows:
1.Identifying its most valuable partner
2.what at the time they called “power user.”
That was a choice driven by its business model design. Therefore,
instead of focusing on generically offering a coffee for everyone, Bo’s
Coffee focused on acquiring and attracting as many power coffee
drinkers as possible.
Those power drinkers were mostly on call center company areas that
had already scaled them up. Thus, Bo’s Coffee focused all its effort on
acquiring those power coffee drinkers from call center companies and
offices, fast! Only after Bo’s Coffee had drafted, tested, and validated
25. a clear value proposition for a small, yet a critical group of power coffee
drinkers, it could move on to take larger and larger segments of that market.
Business modeling is about experimentation
Where scientists use labs to test their hypothesis through experimentation.
Entrepreneurs build business model experiments to test their business ideas
in the real world. Study and carefully analyze the details and flow given.
27. The key components of any business model analysis are:
A compelling value proposition: How do you want your
people to think about your brand?
A unique brand positioning: What do you offer to your
people that make them want more?
A 10x goal setting: Can you offer a 10X better product or
service? (compared to existing solutions)
Customer segments: Who is your customer? (to notice here
we’re not talking anymore about people but customers, those
willing to pay for your product or service)
Distribution channels: How do you get your product or
service to your customers?
Profit formula: Is the business financially sustainable?
28. This business model framework has four aims:
1.simplicity: heuristics-based rather than complex models
2.noise reduction: choosing a few key data points, rather than
looking at a massive amount of data that only adds noise and
paralyze decision-making processes
3.branding and distribution: looking at a business model as a
systematic way to build a strong distribution network and a
strong brand. The two things walk hand in hand
4.and profitability: the financial viability of a business model is
a key element for its success
There are two dimensions of a business in this framework that
should walk hand in hand:
I. People dimension
29. 12
Elements of people dimension:
a)A compelling value proposition: How do you want your
people to think about your brand?
b)A unique brand positioning: What do you offer to your
people that make them want more?
c)A 10x goal setting: Can you offer a 10X better product or
service? (compared to existing solutions)
II.Financial dimension
Three elements of the financial dimensions are:
a)Customer segments: Who is your customer? (to notice
here we’re not talking anymore about people but customers,
those willing to pay for your product or service)
30. b) Distribution channels:
How do you get your product
or service to your customers?
c) Profit formula: Is the
business financially
sustainable?
This people dimension will help
you build a solid brand. A solid
brand builds up a tribe, a group
of people that can follow you
anywhere. Once you have a solid
brand, you can focus on the
second dimension: the financial
dimension.
31. Assessment
1.What is an assumption of your business that also contains financial
projections about the business for the next 3-5 years?
A.Business Model
B.Start-up costs
C.Business Plan
D.Value Proposition
2. What is a high-level introduction to the company and business model?
A.Business Plan
B.Objectives
C.Mission
D.Vision
32. Assessment
3. What is a high-level plan for profitably operating a business in a specific
marketplace?
A.Business Model
B.Start-up costs
C.Business Plan
D.Value Proposition
4. What is defined as a description of the goods or services that a company
offers and why they are desirable to customers or clients, ideally stated
in a way that differentiates the product or service from its competitors
and the primary component of the business model?
A.Business Model
B.Start-up costs
C.Business Plan
D.Value Proposition
33. Assessment
5. What is th term given for the description of the different types of
customers to be targeted and their pain points?
A.customer targets and challenges
B.Pricing
C.go-to-market
D.Value
6. What refers to a company's plan for making a profit. It identifies the
products or services the business plans to sell, its identified target
market, and any anticipated expenses?
A.Business Model
B.Start-up Costs
C.Business Plan
D.Value Proposition
34. Assessment
7. What channels that will be used to reach and sell to customers?
A.customer targets and challenges
B.Star -up costs
C.go-to-market
D.Value proposition
8. How the product will solve those pain points?
A.customer targets and challenges
B.Pricing
C.go-to-market
D.Solution
35. Assessment
9. What is an economic principle referring to a consumer's desire to purchase
goods and services and willingness to pay a price for a specific good or
service?
A.Demand
B.Start-up Costs
C.Solution
D.Value proposition
10. What is an aim element of the business model which is looking at a
business model as a systematic way to build a strong distribution
network and a strong brand?
A.Branding and distribution
B.Profitability
C.Noise and reduction
D.Simplicity
36. 16
11. It is a framework for how a company will create value. It answers
fundamental questions about the problem you are going to solve,
how you will solve it, and the growth opportunity within a given
market.
A. Business Model
B. Start-up costs
C. Business Plan
D. Value Proposition
12. What are the community of customers or businesses that you are
aiming to sell your product or services to?
A. Customer Data
B. Customer Segment
C. Customer Evaluation
D. Customer Structure
37. 16
13. It provides an answer to simple questions about a new business or
a business already under way: Which markets?, when?, who?
how? where?
A. Business Model
B. Start-up costs
C. Business Plan
D. Value Proposition
14. It is the process whereby a business sets the price at which it will
sell its products and services. It may be part of the business’s
marketing plan.
A. customer target
B. Marketing
C. go-to-market
D. Pricing
38. 16
15. What is a plan that develops all of the procedures and strategies
necessary in order to convert the business opportunity into an
actual business project?
A. Business Model
B. Start-up costs
C. Business Plan
D. Value Proposition