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Business Model Generation
Book

Business Model Generation

A Handbook for Visionaries, Game Changers, and Challengers

Wiley, 2010
First Edition: 2010 Mehr


Editorial Rating

10

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Applicable

Recommendation

A different kind of business world calls for a different kind of business manual, and that’s what Alex Osterwalder and Yves Pigneur achieve in their New Age guide to contemporary business modeling. Abetted by their “Business Model Innovation Hub” – with 470 online collaborators in 45 countries – the authors practiced what they preached by applying their modeling concepts to the book’s production. Their concepts are not just theories: major companies such as IBM and Ericsson are converts to the “Business Model Canvas,” a low-tech template for brainstorming and visualizing corporate roles and processes. The book’s breezy, colorful format, filled with photos, drawings, charts and graphics, belies its intensely researched, reality-grounded content. A big sheet of paper and a slew of Post-it notes are all you need to get started; that, and your team's combined creativity, intellect and persistence. Entrepreneurs and business leaders looking to create or redesign their business models will appreciate this comprehensive, pictorial handbook.

Summary

“Design Tomorrow’s Enterprises”

Upstart technologies and lightning-fast implementation drive various new business models that radically alter industries and commerce. Just look at how Apple’s iPod revolutionized the music industry, how Skype turned the telecommunications field upside down and how Grameen Bank “popularized microlending” as a new form of finance. A business model – defined as “the rationale of how an organization creates, delivers and captures value” – can launch an entrepreneur’s new idea or readjust the thrust of an existing company.

The Swatch Group is a case in point: Previously specializing in high-end watches, the Swiss company diversified into the producing the low-priced Swatch line of watches in response to Asian rivals. The Swatch Group has thrived in both the upper and lower segments of its market largely because it chose to serve these segments by using different business models. Swatch is an example of a company that manages not just one business model but a “portfolio” of business models.

Constructing a Business Model

Strategizing an innovative business model, a process which sometimes can resemble structured...

About the Authors

Alex Osterwalder is an author, speaker and adviser on business-model innovation. Yves Pigneur is a professor of management information systems at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland.