Building Scalable Business Models
by Christian Nielsen and Morten Lund
Many of
today’s most successful companies are able to leverage business model
scalability to achieve profitable growth. Executives need to factor scalability
attributes into their business model design or they risk being left behind.
Business model innovation has become an
increasingly hot topic in management circles, and understandably so. No
management activity is more important than having clarity about how the
organization creates, delivers, and captures value. It requires, among other
things, knowing what customers want, how value can be best delivered, and how
to enlist strategic partners to achieve maximum benefit.
Although the ability to develop strong value
propositions can enable companies to “get by,” in our view many of today’s most
successful businesses are those that are able to place themselves in the “sweet
spot” of business model scalability. Scalability is about achieving profitable
growth and is therefore a fundamental consideration for managers and investors
alike. If managers are incapable of factoring scalability attributes into their
business model design, they risk being left behind, much the way bookstores
owned by Borders Group Inc. were eclipsed by Amazon.com Inc.
Over a five-year period, we studied scalability
in the context of more than 90 Scandinavian businesses and also examined the
experiences of a number of well-known businesses, including Google, Apple, and
Groupon. (See “About the Research.”) In the course of our research, we
identified five patterns by which companies can achieve scalability. The first
pattern involved adding new distribution channels. The second entailed freeing
the business from traditional capacity constraints. The third involved
outsourcing capital investments to partners who, in effect, became participants
in the business model. The fourth was to have customers and other partners
assume multiple roles in the business model. And the fifth pattern was to
establish platform models in which even competitors may become customers. Based
on these patterns, we have developed a framework for identifying potential
levers for business model scalability, along with a road map that managers can
use to improve their business models.
Over and above the need to create value
propositions that are difficult for competitors to replicate, managers need to
develop business models that are capable of achieving positive and accelerating
returns on the investments made. When companies restructure or invest in
acquisitions, it’s common for them to identify synergies that reduce costs and
simplify workflows and product offerings. However, simply thinking in terms of
synergies isn’t enough; such synergies don’t necessarily lead to improvements
in business model scalability. To achieve scalability, managers and
entrepreneurs need to remove capacity constraints. They have opportunities to
do this in a variety of ways: by collaborating with partners, by encouraging
partners to play multiple roles in the business model, by creating platforms to
attract new partners, or even by working with current competitors.
Accelerating Returns to Scale
What do we mean by “scalable”? We use the term
scalability to identify where changes in size or volume are possible and seem
worthwhile. Scalability refers to a system’s ability to expand output on demand
when resources are added. Linking scalability to business models provides us
with a framework for discussing and estimating business potential, which is
important to both executives and many stakeholders because, among other things,
it has implications for hiring and skill development. Another important characteristic
of scalability is that the organization has sufficient flexibility to grow
while incorporating the effects of external pressures, such as new competitors,
altered regulation, or macroeconomic pressure.
The first dimension of scalability is the
degree to which increased input can create higher output. The second dimension
of scalability relates to the ability of the business model to accelerate the
returns on the additional investment. Accelerating returns to scale are
typically found in business models where new resources, capabilities, or value
propositions provide completely new properties to an existing industry.1 Amazon.com’s retailing
business model offers a good example. For example, the company’s algorithms
introduce customers to products they may not have considered but might be of
interest to them as they shop online.
In those situations where returns to scale are
declining rather than increasing, managers should figure out how quickly to
exit the business. If the returns are falling precipitously, it might make
sense to pull out quickly. Even when returns are flat, further investments may
be unattractive. As a general rule, executives should invest capital where they
can generate increasing returns to scale.
Scalability Patterns in Business Models
A scalable business model is one that is
flexible and where the addition of new resources brings increasing returns. In
the course of our research, we searched for business model attributes that were
sufficiently flexible to cope with internal demands and external forces and
where the potential wasn’t constrained by physical or material assets (such as
labor shortages, machine capacity, cash liquidity, or storage capacity). Below
we will examine the five patterns of business model scalability individually.
Pattern
A: Add new distribution channels. While
the notion of selling through multiple distribution channels isn’t novel, it’s
useful to understand what happens when an additional channel is added. As long
as the implementation of a new distribution channel does not cannibalize sales
in existing channels, adding a new sales channel can allow a company to spread
the costs of overhead and reap benefits from increased sales.
We found this to be the case at Copenhagen Seafood
A/S, a Danish supplier of fresh fish. The company, which had traditionally sold
only to high-end restaurants, added the sale of fresh fish directly to retail
customers, enabling it to offer restaurant-quality seafood to individuals at
reasonable prices. Because restaurants typically ask for specific cuts of fish,
the percentage of waste can be high. By adding the retail channel, Copenhagen
Seafood was able to cultivate a new clientele with people who relished the
opportunity to buy from a seafood supplier closely associated with some of the
city’s best-known restaurants.2
Pattern
B: Explore ways to work around traditional capacity constraints. Scalability often
means finding ways to overcome traditional capacity constraints. Obviously,
constraints vary from industry to industry. In the pharmaceutical industry, the
constraints might involve the cost of establishing research infrastructure and
the ability to develop new products and receive approval for new products.
However, when viewing constraints from the perspective of business model
innovation, companies should ask themselves if they can find ways to work
around existing constraints. In the private banking sector, for example, a
company might bypass capacity constraints by focusing on customer relationship
activities and outsourcing infrastructure management to others. In a similar
vein, a consulting company with a business model focused on hourly billing for
large government organizations explored bypassing that constraint by marketing
standard outputs and simpler reports to a new customer segment consisting of
smaller businesses.
Pattern
C: Shift capital requirements to partners. Every organization needs to prioritize
its investments and determine which are most critical. CFOs are encouraged to
optimize the cash liquidity constraints, cash flow, and working capital
attributes of their business models. Given that many companies place a high
value on cash, business models that shift capital requirements to strategic
partners can be desirable.3
One company we studied was Sky-Watch A/S, a
company based in Støvring, Denmark, that develops and manufactures drones
suited for a variety of industrial settings. Sky-Watch’s business model has
fewer resource constraints than some of its close competitors thanks to
management’s decision to concentrate on turning the core platform into an open
platform that allows customers and strategic partners to add their own hardware
and software.
Pattern
D: Leverage the work of partners. Companies need to pay attention to what their
customers and strategic partners value. Managers should use this knowledge to
optimize the value proposition of the products and services they offer to
customers. The key is to find smart ways to leverage the resources of partners.
For example, Tupperware Brands Corp., based in Orlando, Florida, is famous for
leveraging a community of sales representatives who have an interest in selling
the company’s food-storage products to a widening circle of people. Groupon
Inc. likewise turns customers into partners by giving them incentives to spread
the word about the company. Similar strategies can be leveraged for
distribution methods, building customer loyalty, giving access to resources,
and performing other activities according to the value configuration of the
business model.
Pattern
E: Implement platform models. A variation on leveraging partners involves
using platform-based business models. Platform models are based on
collaboration and can take different forms. For example, PrintConnect.com of Würselen,
Germany, operates a web-based workflow platform for printing and packaging that
links partners across the value chain. Some platform business models predate
the web: Visa Inc., which connects businesses with credit card users, is an
example.
When looking at business model innovation from
a platform perspective, an important question is, “How do we turn competitors
into partners or perhaps even customers?” For example, The Relationship Factory, 4 a company based in
Aarhus, Denmark, that organizes professional networking groups for managers,
opted for a platform model to achieve business model scalability. It makes its
software platform available to competitors on a private-label basis, thereby
providing the company with a supplemental and recurring revenue stream on top
of its traditional service-based activities. While competitors continue to rely
heavily on their sale of service hours, the company is able to generate
incremental revenue by selling “ease of use” to its competitors as well as
benchmarking data across the industry.
A Road Map to
Business Model Scalability
The patterns we have discussed above describe
how companies can adjust their business models to make them scalable. While
traditional thinking typically leads to synergy effects and, at best, positive
returns that are linear to the investments, some of the companies we studied
showed that it was possible to redesign business models to achieve accelerating
returns. However, achieving accelerating returns is not easy. It requires
thinking strategically in terms of the value propositions of stakeholders,
strategic partners, and customers involved in the immediate business ecosystem.
Aligning and leveraging the competencies and motivations of these stakeholders
can lead to better cooperation. It can also build greater trust and loyalty
among partners, which will pay off in the long term.
To implement the patterns for scalability, it
is often necessary to identify activities and resources where collaborating
with partners is advantageous and can strengthen the offering’s value
proposition to customers. These patterns can assist managers in rethinking how
their business models make use of partners, customers, and other stakeholders.
Rather than just relying on traditional analytical exercises such as analyzing
cost structures, product-segment profitability, and market-segment growth,
managers can work on achieving business model scalability by asking a different
set of questions. The questions will often lead to the identification of new
partners and potentially new roles.
We suggest that companies
pursue three steps:
1.
Identify potential strategic partners. Scalability typically involves connecting
strategic partners to the value proposition, either through sharing activities
or resources. Given that scalability requires thinking beyond simply sharing
costs, executives should ask themselves the following:
·
Are there potential strategic partners that could perform
activities in our business model — or provide resources to it — in ways that
would help improve the value proposition to our customers?
2. Ask
questions that reveal a road map to scalability. Asking questions can
trigger ideas about how to reconfigure a business model. When encountering
novel ways of doing business, managers should analyze how such a business model
would play out for their own company. We have found that the following
questions can be helpful:
·
How does this novel business model challenge our existing way of
thinking about the business?
·
What would we need to do differently to implement this business
model?
·
Which other companies excel at what we are trying to do, and
what can we learn from them?
·
What are the key value drivers of this particular business
model?
·
Could this business model lead to scalability?
Based on the ideas you are able to generate, we
recommend using the following questions to help clarify potential avenues for
scalability:
·
Are there potential strategic partners that can offer features
(at minimal or no cost to our company) that enrich the existing value
proposition to our customers, while receiving value themselves?
·
Are there alternative configurations that free the business
model from existing capacity constraints?
·
Would it make sense to establish a platform for other businesses
to buy into — and thus create alternative ways of generating revenue?
·
Is it possible to change the role of existing stakeholders and
utilize them in multiple roles in the business model?
·
Who would pay for either access to our customer base or
knowledge about our customers and their characteristics?
·
Which mechanisms are in place to create customer lock-in?
·
How agile is our company in reacting to threats from new
entrants or new technologies?
3.
Analyze the scalability attributes of business model options. When all of the ideas
generated have been presented, executives should facilitate a discussion to
start to evaluate potential business models. They should analyze the attributes
of the various options and consider how they might be configured to achieve
accelerating returns on investments.
Traditionally, some companies have developed
business models that focus on achieving economies of scale while other
companies have been more geared toward creating economies of scope through
differentiation. We have found that scalability goes beyond this traditional
distinction and that identifying the sweet spot of business model scalability
involves identifying accelerating returns on input.
In cases of declining returns to scale,
managers should focus on downsizing the business so as not to cannibalize
existing value. In cases where the returns on additional inputs are constant,
managers should attempt to find ways to increase returns or invest excess
capital elsewhere. When the business is able to generate positive, albeit
linear, returns on additional inputs, the existence of synergies can make this
a favorable place to be, although the company may be stuck with a business
model that is at best average. In this case, managers should attempt to improve
their business model using one of the five patterns described above.
Having a road map for business model
scalability can be enormously helpful for managers, whether they are involved
in developing new business models from scratch or innovating, rejuvenating, or
redesigning existing business models. Although much of the recent research
about business model innovation examines the alignment between value
propositions and customer needs,5 business model scalability depends on close
alignment between the value proposition and strategic partners.
The patterns we have identified as gateways to
scalable business models (for example, enriching value propositions, removing
capacity constraints, and changing the role of stakeholders in business models)
provide avenues for managers to explore. Identifying business model
configurations that allow for such characteristics should be a top priority for
managers as they develop and review their corporate strategies.
Source | MIT
Sloan Management Review |
Winter 2018
Regards!
Librarian
Rizvi
Institute of Management
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