Business Model
Concept describing how an organization creates, delivers and captures value. It structures customer segments, value propositions, revenue streams and costs and links them to organizational and product strategy.
Classification
- ComplexityMedium
- Impact areaBusiness
- Decision typeOrganizational
- Organizational maturityIntermediate
Technical context
Principles & goals
Use cases & scenarios
Compromises
- Incorrect pricing assumptions lead to financial problems.
- Overestimating channel scalability.
- Ignoring regulatory requirements.
- Use canvas visualizations for collaborative discussion.
- Prioritize hypotheses and test iteratively.
- Link model decisions with KPIs.
I/O & resources
- Market and customer research
- Financial figures and budget assumptions
- Organization and process overviews
- Model variants and scenarios
- Decision proposals for stakeholders
- Implementation roadmap
Description
A business model describes how an organization creates, delivers and captures value. It covers customer segments, value propositions, channels, revenue mechanisms and cost structures. The concept guides strategic decisions, validates new offers and aligns organization, product and revenue streams. It is used in workshops and strategic planning.
✔Benefits
- Clarity about revenue streams and cost structure.
- Basis for strategic prioritization.
- Facilitates communication with stakeholders.
✖Limitations
- Simplifying complex reality can obscure details.
- No guarantee of market success despite good modeling.
- Can become outdated quickly in dynamic markets.
Trade-offs
Metrics
- Revenue by income stream
Measures the contribution of different revenue mechanisms to total revenue.
- Customer Lifetime Value (CLV)
Estimates the expected value of a customer over the entire relationship.
- Cost structure ratio
Analyzes fixed vs. variable costs as a share of total expenditure.
Examples & implementations
Marketplace platform model
Marketplaces connect suppliers and demanders, monetizing via transaction fees and supplementary services.
Subscription model for software
Recurring subscriptions secure ongoing revenue and enable continuous product development.
Freemium model
Basic features are free, premium features are paid; the aim is scaling and targeted monetization.
Implementation steps
Capture the current business logic and core assumptions.
Model alternative value propositions and revenue sources.
Conduct rapid validation experiments with customers.
Assess financial impact and scalability.
Derive organizational and technical adjustments.
⚠️ Technical debt & bottlenecks
Technical debt
- Legacy systems prevent flexible pricing models.
- Lack of data infrastructure hinders validation.
- Fragmented platforms block cross-channel offerings.
Known bottlenecks
Misuse examples
- A company runs multiple incompatible pricing models simultaneously and confuses customers.
- The model is never updated and ignores changed customer behavior.
- Focusing on margins leads to neglect of customer retention.
Typical traps
- Overestimating economies of scale without operational foundation.
- Underestimating legal or regulatory requirements.
- Ignoring indirect costs in the cost structure.
Required skills
Architectural drivers
Constraints
- • Existing contracts and partnerships
- • Technological platform dependencies
- • Legal and tax frameworks