Business Models Matter

In business school, I had the privilege to read, study and analyze 1,600 business cases and as a strategy consultant I had the opportunity to transform several different businesses and industries.  Additionally, over the past decade I have reviewed, invested in and created hundreds of business plans as an entrepreneur, Entrepreneur in Residence/Venture Partner with two venture capital firms and Chairman of a Seed Capital investment firm.  One of the lessons that I've learned, often painfully as I look back on my mistakes, is that business models really do matter and have a tremendous impact on the success of any new venture

 

What is a Business Model?

 

A business model is nothing more than the description of how a business works, makes money, grows, serves its customers, etc.  Obviously with proven businesses, the business model is easier to comprehend than in many newly designed businesses. 

 

It was easier to understand the business model of a regular store-front book retailer than it was initially to understand the business model of Amazon.com, although, as it turns out Amazon.com had a vastly superior business model.  It was also easier to understand the business model of Hewlett Packard's computer business in the late-1980's than it was to envision how Dell Computer might be different, but again, as it turns out, Dell had a superior business model.

 

Let's explore both examples to clarify the different business models and to establish why it is important to think this way prior to launching or acquiring your own business.

 

Store-Front vs. Online Book Retailing

 

In the mid 1990's the typical book retailer bought a whole inventory of books, stuck them on shelves in a high-rent facility and waited for customers to drive to them, browse for books and make a purchase.  For Amazon.com, their goal was to build a compelling, feature-laden website that allowed customers to easily find and order books online within a couple of clicks of a mouse.  The different business model of Amazon.com had dramatic cash flow, scalability and profitability implications.  Amazon could grow very rapidly because they got paid instantly by customer's credit cards, but negotiated to only pay vendors after 60 to 90 days, so they were able to leverage the cash of customer's to fund their growth (cash flow).  Amazon was able to sell books worldwide without the infrastructure cost of a regular retailer and once they built the website, there was nearly no incremental cost of serving the "nth" customer compared to the first customer, so variable costs were transformed into lower fixed costs (scalability).  And, although it took a while to get to profitability due to the outsized investment required to build a new brand, when Amazon did reach profitability, their profit potential far outstripped the normal razor thin margins of typical retailers.

 

Check out this quick comparison of recent full-year performance between Barnes & Noble (primarily store-front, although a significant web presence) and Amazon.com (web only).  It is clear to see that Amazon.com has a far superior business model.

 

 

Barnes & Noble

Amazon.com

Revenue

$4,873.6M

$6,921.1M

Income

$143.4M

$588.5M

Income %

2.9%

8.5%

Enterprise Value

$2,730.0M

$19,480.0M

# Stores (retail and web)

820

1

# Employees

42,000

9,000

Revenue per Store

$5.9M

$6,921.1M

Income per Store

$0.2M

$588.5M

Revenue per Employee

$116.0K

$769.0K

Income per Employee

$3.4K

$65.4K

 

Corporate vs. Direct Consumer Computer Sales

 

At the time of Dell's launch, computer sales of companies like IBM or Hewlett-Packard was focused on the business market with mass-produced machines that were placed in inventory and sold through value-added resellers to corporate customers that valued blue-chip vendors over price, purchased in volume, worked with pre-established credit lines and purchase orders. 

 

Meanwhile, Dell's strategy was to sell personal computers to the emerging consumer market, which had different needs than the business market and was under-served by the industry leaders such as IBM and Hewlett-Packard.  The Dell offering was to cater to the particular needs of consumers which included convenient build-to-order manufacturing one unit at a time, price-competitive customer-direct sales and a credit card based billing system.

 

In this case, the market served required a different business model and Dell was one of the first to figure that out and to capitalize on those differences by developing different capabilities.

 

Business Models Matter

 

So clearly, business models matter in terms of the financial performance of the business as well as what customers you serve and how you serve them.  So what do you do with this information?  For starters, you should think through different business model implications to guide your strategy on developing your own business.  See our Venture Analysis for 50 different aspects to think through that will impact your business model.


Joseph Manion September 12, 2007

This is a point that was repeatedly made clear during our internship to illustrate and reinforce in our minds as VentureApprentices.

Nolan Manteufel September 21, 2007

I will sometimes joke that "not all business ideas are created equal".

At the same time, there is profit in all labor (Proverbs 14:23). Some are just... well... more profitable.

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