Your company lacks an effective transition period Strategic Growth Plan and Continuous Business Model Innovation Program for sustaining continued product and service innovation, brand recognition, customer engagement, business growth and profitability, all of which impacts your company’s present growth and survival, and therefore your future exit pricing and feasibility.
In order to grow your business, it’s critical that you take the following two actions:
- Adopt A Continuous Business Model Innovation Program
- Document A Transition Period Growth Strategy
There is a lot of misunderstanding as to what exactly is a business model. A company’s business model represents the business logic, at the strategic level, by which a company operates to make a profit. It is a representation of how a company makes (or would intend to make) money.
In order to visualize this conceptually, the informal descriptions of business models can be formalized into building blocks relationships. Many different conceptualizations have been developed in the business literature. An example is the business research study by Dr. Alexander Osterwalder: The Business Model Ontology – A Proposition In A Design Science Approach (2004).
The business model choices you make in operating your business will cause the success or failure of your enterprise. The 2006 and 2008 IBM Global CEO Studies demonstrate that CEOs believe that business model innovation is becoming the new strategic differentiator. These studies found that companies which focus on business model innovation outperform companies which focus on operations in terms of operating margin growth.
The objective after you have described your business model is to continuously improve it. This can occur at each layer of the company. This can be at the overall company level, the business line level, or for a particular product or service.
Your business model components can be described as follows:
- Value Offer. The overall view of the bundle of products and services I offer.
- Key Activities. The arrangement of the activities and resources I use to make and provide my products and services.
- Partner Networks. The outside partners and alliances that help me make or sell my products or services.
- Core Resources. The principal or unique repeatable capabilities I have for creating value for my customers.
- Cost Structures. The sum of the monetary approaches and cost methods I use to run my business model.
- Customer Relationships. How I keep what I make in sync with what my target customers want or need.
- Target Customers. The customers I want to offer value to.
- Distribution Channels. The means by which I deliver products and services to customers (including marketing and distribution strategies).
- Revenue Streams. The various ways I price what my customers must pay for what I sell.
There are three ways to innovate a business model.
- Change the business model. By doing similar things differently. This means offering similar value propositions in an entirely new fashion. Skype is an example. It offers a value proposition that is very similar to phone companies: phone calls. However, its business model allows it to use the Internet as a free telecom infrastructure/network. This has extremely low variable costs and enables it to reach customers worldwide. Its business model offers the same thing, but differently because it uses different resources, needs different competencies, and uses different distribution channels.
- Extend the business model. This means building on the current business model building blocks by adding new ones. An example is where competing telecom and cable industries aim at offering mobile and fixed communication, Internet broadband, and TV all in one package.
- Create a new business model. This occurs when an entirely new business model is created when new markets emerge. Downloading ring-tones for mobile phones is an example. This illustrates what can happen when entrepreneurs find ways of exploiting new technologies and trends.
Fortune Magazine recently reported (October 2, 2006) that “business models are living much shorter lives these days.”
By continuously looking to evaluate and improve your business model components, you can significantly improve your chances of continuous profitability and success.
Why would anyone want to buy your company? More specifically, why would anyone want to buy your company at the price you are asking?
The answer tends to consistently be very straightforward. Most buyers are interested in acquiring a company if they have a relatively high degree of certainty that the company will produce steady, fairly predictable, growing net cash flow. The “present value” of future cash flow is typically the best way to develop a price for a business. Essentially, a buyer’s willingness to pay your price depends on your ability to deliver to the buyer a basket of tangible and intangible assets which function together like a well-oiled piece of machinery to produce this steady, predictable, and growing cash flow.
One of the best ways to demonstrate your financial fitness to a buyer is to have a well-constructed Strategic Growth Plan for achieving profitable growth into the future (and for achieving it without you). Like a good business plan, a strategic plan for future growth should demonstrate your place in your industry and your industry’s place in the overall economic momentum. In essence, you need to demonstrate that you can grow.
To the extent that you have developed a well-stated, well-constructed business model and strategic plan to demonstrate exactly how you intend to sustain the vitality and growth of your company, your ability to sell your business, your ability to attract a quality buyer, and your ability to achieve your asking price are all enhanced.