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What Are Business Models, and How Are They Built

The document discusses the significance of business model innovation in reshaping industries and driving growth, emphasizing that most innovations come from start-ups rather than established corporations. It outlines the four interdependent elements of a business model: value proposition, resources, processes, and profit formula, and explains how these elements interact to create value for customers and companies. Additionally, it highlights the role of disruptive innovation and the necessity for companies to adapt their business models to succeed in evolving markets.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
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What Are Business Models, and How Are They Built

The document discusses the significance of business model innovation in reshaping industries and driving growth, emphasizing that most innovations come from start-ups rather than established corporations. It outlines the four interdependent elements of a business model: value proposition, resources, processes, and profit formula, and explains how these elements interact to create value for customers and companies. Additionally, it highlights the role of disruptive innovation and the necessity for companies to adapt their business models to succeed in evolving markets.

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REV: NOV EMBER 19, 2021

M O D U L E N OT E

What Are Business Models, and How Are They


Built?
Business model innovations have reshaped entire industries and redistributed billions of dollars of
value. 1 Business models that did not exist prior to 1960 now account for over 90% of the total market
capitalization of the retailing industry; and business models that did not exist prior to 1980 now account
for literally 100% of the computer industry. Over the most recent 10-year period, 13 of the 26 entrants
into the Fortune 500 owe their success to business model innovations that either transformed existing
industries or created new ones.

Despite the growth that they can create, established corporations rarely create innovative business
models: Most are forged by start-ups. Why do they struggle to capture the new growth that business
model innovation can bring? Part of the problem is that there is little codified understanding of the
elements of business models or the process of building them. Most companies therefore don’t fully
understand the sources of the strengths and limitations of their existing business models; the premises
behind their development; and the interdependencies amongst the elements of their models. This leaves
them unable to know when they can leverage their core business, and when success requires a new
business model. Indeed, the consequent clumsiness in creating new business models has led to the
widespread belief that companies can only successfully innovate “close to the core.”

What is a Business Model?


As suggested in Figure A, a business model consists of four interlocking, interdependent elements
that, taken together, create and deliver value. It starts with a value proposition—a product or service
that helps customers do more effectively, conveniently and affordably a job that they’ve been trying to
do. 2 By job we mean a fundamental problem in the customer’s situation that needs a solution. Every
job has functional, emotional, and social dimensions of the result that is needed—which define the
experiences in purchase and use that need to be provided to get the job done perfectly. We’ve chosen

1 This note draws extensively upon Mark W. Johnson, Clayton M. Christensen, and Henning Kagermann, “Reinventing Your
Business Model,” Harvard Business Review, (December 2008).
2 We have written elsewhere about the importance of understanding the job that customers are trying to do. See, for example,
Christensen et.al., “Finding the Right Job for your Product,” MIT Sloan Management Review (Spring 2007), and Christensen et.al.,
“Marketing Malpractice,” Harvard Business Review, (December 2005).

This module note was prepared by Professor Clayton M. Christensen and Mark W. Johnson, Chairman, Innosight to aid students in the Elective
Curriculum course, “Building and Sustaining a Successful Enterprise.”

Copyright © 2009, 2016, 2021 President and Fellows of Harvard College. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, call 1-800-
545-7685, write Harvard Business School Publishing, Boston, MA 02163, or go to www.hbsp.harvard.edu. This publication may not be digitized,
photocopied, or otherwise reproduced, posted, or transmitted, without the permission of Harvard Business School.

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610-019 Module Note—What Are Business Models, and How Are They Built?

the words in this paragraph carefully. If a value proposition helps customers do something that they’re
not trying to do—even if they should be trying to do it—there is not a viable basis for a business model.

Resources
The value proposition defines the resources the business must put in place in order to deliver the
value proposition. In general, resources are things such as people, technology, products, suppliers,
distribution channels, equipment, facilities, brands and cash. Resources typically can be hired and
fired, bought and sold, built or destroyed.

Processes
As a company uses its resources to deliver the value proposition, processes coalesce. Some processes
are visible, codified and consciously monitored and managed. Other processes are habitual ways of
working together to get things done that have evolved over time in response to recurrent tasks. When
processes have been used successfully and repeatedly, they become followed by assumption, rather
than explicit decision—“That’s just the way we do things around here”—and become part of the
culture of the organization.

Figure A What Is a Business Model?

RESOURCES:
THE VALUE PROPOSITION:
People, technology, products,
A product that helps
facilities, equipment, brands,
customers do more effectively,
and cash that are required to
conveniently & affordably a
deliver this value proposition
job they’ve been trying to do
to the targeted customers

PROCESSES:
PROFIT FORMULA:
Ways of working together to
Assets & fixed cost structure, address recurrent tasks in a
and the margins & velocity consistent way: training,
required to cover them development, manufacturing,
budgeting, planning, etc.

Source: Casewriters.

Profit formula The profit formula defines the gross and net margins the organization must
achieve, given the structure and magnitude of the fixed and variable costs inherent in its resources. It
specifies how big the organization must become in order to break even, and the pattern of profit
improvement, if any, that comes from increasing scale. And the profit formula defines how fast the
organization must turn over its assets, in order to achieve adequate returns.

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In general, the value proposition defines value for the customer and the profit formula defines value
for the company and its owners. The resources and processes describe how that value will be delivered
to both the customer and the company.

The arrows that link the boxes in Figure A are bidirectional because the sequence in which the four
boxes of the business model are assembled typically varies by circumstance. When the value proposition
relates to product functionality and reliability, the sequence typically occurs clockwise from the value
proposition. The profit formula is derived from the resources and processes that are required to deliver
the functionality and reliability. When cost weighs heavily in the value proposition, however, then the
pieces typically are put in place in a counter-clockwise direction, with prices and margins being set first.
Processes and resources then need to be devised to fit within that constraint.

Business Models and Disruptive Innovation


Negligence or failure in business model innovation is the primary reason why the leading
incumbent firms in most industries typically fail when confronted by disruptive attackers. As shown
in Figure B below, there are three enabling elements to each disruption. The first is a technological
innovation that transforms the fundamental technological problem in an industry from one that
previously had been so complicated that only a few, highly expert people could design and provide
the products or services, into something that is so simple that people with much less training can do it
well. In computers, for example, the simplifying technology was the microprocessor. Whereas
computer design previously had been an expensive, interdependent, intuitive and experimental
process, the microprocessor so simplified the process that Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak could piece
together a computer in a garage, and Michael Dell could design and assemble them in his college dorm
room. In the organic chemicals business the simplifying technology was an understanding of reaction
mechanisms. In medicine the technology that enables disruption is the ability to diagnose diseases
precisely by their cause, rather than by symptom; and so on.

Figure B The Role of Business Model Innovation in the Process of Disruption


Performance
Different measure
Of Performance

Time

3. New Value Network


• Customers
• Distribution
• Suppliers

Time
2. Business Model
Innovation

Source: Casewriters.

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The second enabler of disruption is a disruptive business model. The simplifying technology must
be embedded in a disruptive business model, whose resources, processes and profit formula enable it
to deliver the simple, affordable solution to the customer in a cost-effective way. In the history of
computing, by illustration, Digital Equipment Corporation, the leading maker of minicomputers
through the 1970s and 1980s, had a wide variety of microprocessors available to it—some of the best
were even made in-house. But DEC’s business model could not profitably make and sell a computer
for less than $50,000—so the company was disrupted and toppled by the desktop computer despite the
fact that the enabling technology was readily available.

The third enabler of disruption is a new value network—an ecosystem within which the disruptive
business model is embedded. Within a value network, suppliers and distributors and customers have
similar value propositions and profit formulae, and they tend to develop products in a similar rhythm.
If a firm tries to grow a disruptive business within the value network in the rear plane of Figure B, that
value network will force the disruptive business model to conform to its development rhythms, profit
formulae, and value proposition.

Corporate Evolution and Business Model Innovation


It is a well documented fact that never in the course of business history has a company that was the
leader in the rear-most plane of competition (in terms of Figure B), become the leader in the new,
disruptive plane of competition as well, unless it established a completely different business unit
underneath the corporate umbrella. Why? The resources, processes and profit models required to
succeed in the original plane of competition simply are different than those required to succeed in the
new one. The old must coexist with the new, often for years, because disruption is a process, not an
event.

In biological evolution, individual organisms don’t evolve. But little by little, as mutant organisms
gain market share, the population evolves—even though the individuals within it do not. In a similar
way, individual business units, because they comprise a unique business model, rarely evolve. The
interdependencies amongst the four building blocks of the business model mean that business units
can do well what they were designed to do—but they rarely can evolve to do something that is
fundamentally different. But a corporation can evolve, through business model innovation.

To illustrate, let’s review IBM’s history. IBM was the only company that made mainframe
computers that also became a leading maker of minicomputers. How did they do it? IBM made its
mainframes in Poughkeepsie, NY. They were made by the hundreds per year; sold for more than $2
million; and had to generate at least 60% gross margins to make money. IBM was the only mainframe
maker that became a leader in the disruptive minicomputer. It did this by creating a different business
unit in Rochester, MN. These minicomputers sold for $200,000; were made by the tens of thousands;
and required 45% gross margins to cover the overheads inherent in that business. IBM was also the
only maker of minicomputers that became a leader in personal computers. It did this by setting up yet
again a different business unit, in Boca Raton, Florida. This one made computers by the millions, and
sold them at prices of $2,000. Its profit formula required 40% gross margins in the best of years. As
volumes grew, the available margins quickly deteriorated to 25%.

When IBM set up its disruptive business model in Florida to build microprocessor-based
computers, it also proactively constructed an entirely new value network in order to accelerate the
emergence of this disruption. It made a major equity investment in Intel, so that it could build the
capacity to supply the needed microprocessors. It then found a start-up software company in Seattle
called Microsoft and gave it a major purchase order; and did the same for Seagate, a small maker of
5.25-inch disk drives in Scotts Valley, CA. Because there were no retailers that could profitably and

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Module Note—What Are Business Models, and How Are They Built? 610-019

competently sell desktop computers, IBM had to set up its own network of retail stores. Had IBM not
been able to establish this entire value network, its disruptive business model might not have
succeeded—or at a minimum, would have taken much longer to become a major success.

Then as the original business models got disrupted, IBM sold off or shut down most of these
hardware business units, as it grew its services and IT consulting business units. IBM, the corporation,
has evolved significantly, even while its business units did not. Almost all other computer makers, in
contrast, did not evolve—because they did not engage successfully in business model innovation.

When Are There Opportunities for Business Model Innovation?


Many markets can be conceived geographically as a set of concentric circles. Before modern
technology emerges in an industry, activity typically occurs in the largest circle: problems are
addressed where and when they arise in people’s lives. The advent of sophisticated high-performance
technology, however, often drives a “centralization” of the industry. This is because the technology’s
earliest manifestations are so expensive and complicated that only people with a lot of money and a lot
of skill can own and use the products, or offer the services. During this phase, people need to take their
problems to a central location, where someone with the requisite expertise and capital can solve them.
The very cost and inconvenience of this centralized structure, however, typically then spawns a
reciprocal process of “decentralization,” in which successive generations of disruptive innovations
make the products and services so much more affordable and so much simpler, that a larger population
of less-skilled and less-wealthy people can own and use them.

As illustrated in Figure C, for centuries in the computing industry we used slide rules (or pens) to
compute wherever the problems arose. The advent of digital computing, however, drove a
centralization of the industry. Mainframe computers cost millions of dollars and could only be run by
highly trained operators. The typical campus or corporation had one mainframe, at most; and we had
to take our problems, in the form of stacks of punched cards, to that central location to have them
solved by experts. The cost and inconvenience of this arrangement, however, then drove a sequence of
disruptive innovations that decentralized the industry again, step by step. The minicomputer brought
computing to corporations’ engineering departments. The desktop computer brought it to our offices
and homes; the notebook put it in our briefcases; and the hand-held brought computing to our pockets
and purses.

Because each step was achieved by making the product simpler and more affordable, it was
generally disruptive relative to the business models of the prior generation of competitors in the inner
circles. Those competitors aggressively pursued sustaining innovations, competing against direct
competitors within their circle—a circle that was characterized by the value proposition, resources,
processes, and profit formulae that comprised their business model. Unless they created new business
models that were attuned to competition in the next wave of “decentralization,” competitors in the
inner circles ultimately found that their customers were drawn away to the more convenient outer
circles, application by application, as the performance of products in those larger circles became good
enough.

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Figure C Cycles of Centralization and Decentralization in an Industry’s Structure

Source: Casewriters.

Numerous industries—including telecommunications, higher education, retailing, automobiles,


software and steel making—have gone through or are now going through similar cycles of
centralization and decentralization. 3 Others, such as health care and electricity generation, are poised
to begin the process of decentralization.

Many economists hold to a simplistic view that competition always drives prices down. However,
head-on competition amongst competitors with similar business models in a given circle, in terms of
Figure C, typically drives prices up, as competitors vie to make better and better products that can be
sold for more attractive margins. For example, competition amongst hospitals drives prices up. As soon
as one is licensed to perform transplant surgery, others press for licenses to perform the same surgery.
As soon as one has a PET scanner, everyone needs a PET scanner. When one hospital invests in a multi-
million-dollar surgical robot, all need a robot; and so on. Similar competitive races between Sony’s
Playstation and Microsoft’s X-Box up the sustaining trajectory; and competition amongst elite
universities, mainframe computer makers, hotels, and urban real estate developers typically drives
competitors up the trajectory of sustaining innovation—all in the pursuit of higher margins. Typically

3 Sometimes decentralization at one stage in the value-adding chain is achieved by centralization in an adjacent stage in the
chain. In software, for example, software-as-a-service (SaaS) providers such as Salesforce.com house their software in central
locations, enabling them to “serve” it at lower prices to a larger population of smaller companies, in distributed locations—
companies and locations that previously could not afford licenses to Oracle software. In on-line higher education, as another
example, lectures are delivered from a central location to students at the outer-most circle, instead of requiring the students to
come to universities in the inner circles. In retailing, the advent of the department store brought people to the merchandise,
housed in a major downtown location. On-line retailing brings the merchandise to the people. At the next level in the value-
adding chain, however, Internet retailers typically fulfill orders from a central location. This phenomenon invites investigation
by a doctoral student.

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this leads to higher rather than lower prices. The type of competition that leads to lower prices is
disruption that enables decentralization.

There typically are two types of opportunities for business model innovation. The first is when there
is another, broader circle beyond the one being served at present—a population of people who are
trying to do a particular job, but have to put up with inconvenient, cobbled-together solutions because
nobody has created a product that is simple, affordable and convenient enough. These are called new-
market disruptions. There are also opportunities for low-end disruption—fundamentally lower-cost
business models within a given ring if the competitors within that ring, in the pursuit of higher
margins, have overshot what customers can use.

When a New Business Model Is Not Needed


Disruptiveness can only be expressed relative to your own business model or to that of a competitor.
This means that an innovation can be disruptive relative to competitors but not disruptive relative to
your own business model—and vice versa. For example, within the past decade Procter & Gamble has
launched a series of innovations that were consistent with its own business model but disruptive to
others. These included its Crest White Strips, which enabled consumers to whiten their own teeth
instead of requiring the service of a dental professional. And it has launched Dryel and Swash-branded
products that enable consumers to perform dry cleaning at home. These disruptive products did not
require a business model innovation at P&G, because the development, marketing and sales processes
and the profit formulae were compatible with the company’s established businesses. If P&G were to
formulate a low-cost response to the disruption of its products by store brands, on the other hand, it
would require a new business model.

Types of Business Models


There are, generically, three types of business models: solution shops, value-adding process
businesses, and facilitated network businesses. 4 Business model innovation can occur within each of
these types, but the most profound transformation of industries occurs when a business model
innovator substitutes one type for another in an industry.

Solution Shops
Solution shops are institutions whose resources and processes are structured to diagnose and
recommend solutions for complicated problems. Consulting firms, advertising agencies, research and
development organizations certain law firms and certain highly custom manufacturing firms are
solution shops. The diagnostic activities in general hospitals and some of the work done in specialist
physicians’ practices are solution shop activities, in which experts draw upon their deepest experience
and intuition to diagnose the causes of patients’ symptoms and then to recommend solutions. The work
solution shops do for each customer tends to be unique. Because diagnosing the cause of complex

4 We are deeply indebted to our friend Øystein Fjeldstad of the Norwegian School of Management, who developed and then
taught us of this framework. Those interested in this framework should also read Stabell, Charles B., and Øystein D. Fjeldstad,
“Configuring Value for Competitive Advantage: On Chains, Shops and Networks,” Strategic Management Journal, May 1998.
Professor Fjeldstad chose the terms value shops, value chains, and value networks for these three types of business models. He has
graciously given us permission to use different names for each type. The reason we felt it necessary was that Michael Porter has
applied the term “value chain” differently in some of his writings to the activities that occur across an entire supply chain.
Similarly, Clayton Christensen has used the term “value network” to apply to the set of businesses in a value chain that have
mutually supportive and compatible business models. In many ways the names chosen by Professors Fjeldstad and Stabell are
more elegant and simpler than the ones we’ve used here.

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problems and devising workable solutions has such high subsequent leverage, customers typically are
quite willing to pay very high prices for the services of solution shops.

Solution shops typically get paid through a fee-for-service revenue model. Occasionally a
consulting firm might agree to take some of its compensation based upon the ultimate outcomes from
its recommendations, but this rarely works because the outcomes depend upon so many other factors
than the quality of their diagnoses and recommendations.

Value-Adding Process Businesses


Value-adding process business models typically bring things in that are incomplete or broken, add
value to them, and then ship them out, repaired or more complete. Retailing, restaurants, automobile
manufacturing, petroleum refining, and the work of many educational institutions are examples of
value-adding process businesses. Many medical procedures that are performed after a definitive
diagnosis has been made—ranging from a nurse who uses a rules-based test to verify that a patient has
strep throat and then writes a prescription to cure it, to procedures to repair hernias and
angioplastically insert stents into occluded coronary arteries—are value-adding process activities.

Value-adding process businesses typically have a fee-for-outcome revenue model. Because the
ability to deliver the result is resident in equipment and practiced processes, prices can be quoted in
advance; and outcomes guaranteed. 5 Most concepts of strategy were derived from the study of value
chain businesses. 6

Facilitated Networks
Facilitated network businesses are institutions in which the same people buy and sell, and deliver
and receive things from each other. Mutual insurance companies are facilitated network businesses:
Customers put premiums into a pool, and take their claims out of it. Telecommunications companies
facilitate networks in which customers send and receive calls and data amongst each other. Facilitated
networks can often be effective business models for the care of chronic illnesses. Organizations like D-
Life, which facilitates networking amongst patients with diabetes (and their families), enable patients
to teach each other how to live with their diseases. The companies that make money in these industries
are those that facilitate the effective operation of the network.

Disruption Within and Across Business Model Types


As a general rule, when an enabling technology makes it so much more affordable and simple for a
new population of people to own and use a product, the disruption occurs within a type of business
model. The Boston Consulting Group, for example, disrupted McKinsey within the solution shop class
of business models. 7 Within the class of value-adding process business models Toyota has disrupted
General Motors, and Medco is disrupting retail pharmacies. Traditional wire-line telephone

5 Christensen, Grossman and Hwang note in The Innovator’s Prescription (New York: McGraw Hill, 2009) that a core reason why
the care provided in hospitals is so costly is that they are conflations of solution shop and value-adding process activities, which
are fundamentally incompatible.
6 See, for example, Michael Porter (1985), Competitive Advantage. New York: the Free Press.

7 The reason why BCG was disruptive relative to McKinsey was that the vertical axis of the disruption diagram in the consulting
business is the size of the client project. Moving “up-market” in consulting entails migrating towards larger and larger projects.
The strategy projects that BCG originally engaged in were such small-ticket projects relative to the larger organizational
effectiveness, organizational design, and post-merger integration projects that constituted McKinsey’s bread and butter, that
McKinsey’s partners simply weren’t financially motivated to pursue the strategy consulting business.

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companies, which are network facilitators, are being disrupted by other network facilitators—the
wireless carriers, which in turn are being disrupted by Skype, whose network uses voice over Internet
protocol (VoIP).

When the enabling technology makes it affordable and simple for a new population of people to
produce or provide a product or service, then the disruption shifts the industry across the category
boundary, to a different type of business model. For example, Geek Squad is changing the IT services
business from a solution shop business model to a value-adding process model. E-Bay is disrupting
certain retail and distribution channels that historically were configured as value-adding process
businesses, transforming those retailing sectors into facilitated network businesses. Software platforms
that enable students to create tutorial tools to teach each other (peer-to-peer teaching) are disruptively
shifting the instructional materials industry from a value-adding process business (textbooks and on-
line courses) into a facilitated network business. 8 YouTube is transforming video entertainment from
a value-adding process business to a facilitated network business; and so on.

The Relationship between Business Models, Integration and Competition


Integration is defined by the way that processes link resources together within a business model.
Centering the value proposition of a business model on a job-to-be-done typically makes clear the type
and extent of integration that is required to do the job well. Because most organizations are structured
in ways that mirror product or customer categories, they typically find it difficult to respond to a
competitor whose mode of integration is defined by a job to be done. For example, FedEx organized
itself around a job-to-be-done, which is, “I need to get this from here to there with minimal effort and
perfect certainty, as quickly as possible.” Doing this job well entailed integrating ground
transportation, billing systems, and aircraft whose routes were knit together in a Memphis trans-
shipment hub. For nearly a decade the established freight companies such as Emery and United Parcel
Service were left flat-footed as FedEx grew its business—because they were organized around product
and service categories. In a similar way, Ikea has been rolling out across North America for over 30
years in a deliberate, open way—and yet nobody has copied Ikea. A plausible explanation is that other
furniture stores are organized around product categories like “low-priced furniture,” “colonial
furniture,” and so on—whereas Ikea is integrated uniquely to do a specific job: “I need to furnish this
apartment or room today. Ikea’s resources and processes are integrated together in very unique ways
that make it as easy as possible to get this job done.

When firms integrate around customer categories rather than jobs to be done, expensive failure
often is the result. A long series of financial services companies, for example—ranging from Sears,
Roebuck in the 1970s to American Express in the 1990s and to Citigroup most recently—conceived that
because their customers needed checking accounts, life insurance, home mortgages, credit cards, stock
brokerage and investment advisory services, they would become “financial supermarkets”—a one-
stop shopping destination for all financial services that their customers would use. It has never worked.
The reason is that the job for which life insurance needs to be “hired” arises at a different point in time
and space than the job for which checking accounts need to be hired; and so on. We would term such
integration destructive integration because the overhead and inefficiency resulting from attempts to
force-fit or cross-sell multiple services that are unrelated to jobs that customers are trying to do when
they are trying to do them, typically destroys much value.

8 See Christensen, Horn and Johnson, Disrupting Class, New York: McGraw Hill, 2008, for a more complete explanation of this
phenomenon.

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610-019 Module Note—What Are Business Models, and How Are They Built?

There are two types of productive integration. The first arises when two different products compete
to be hired to do the same job. When this occurs we would expect the two products ultimately to be
combined when it is technologically possible. For instance, we wrote in 2000 that because the mobile
telephone and personal digital assistants such as the RIM Blackberry are hired to do the same job
(which is “Help me to be productive in this snippet of idle time”) the two products would become
integrated into a single product. This has occurred.

The second type of productive integration occurs when the need to do two different jobs arises at
the same point in time and space in the customer’s life. In such instances we would expect the services
or products that might be hired to do these jobs to be integrated. By illustration, stand-alone gasoline
stations and convenience food stores are giving way to integrated facilities that sell both. Why? The
jobs for which junk food and gasoline are hired arise at the same point in time and space. Similarly, the
auto companies’ creation of companies that finance auto purchases is productive integration.

A Case Study of Business Model Innovation: Dow Corning


We close this note with a brief description of the process of business model innovation that was
executed in an industry not often associated with such events: commodity chemicals. Dow Corning
(DC) is a maker of inorganic polymer products called silicones that are used in an extraordinary variety
of applications—ranging from protective coatings to adhesives to shampoos and conditioners. In about
2000 a strategic review revealed that many experienced DC customers no longer needed the technical
services and sales engineering that DC had been offering all customers at no cost. Customers that did
not need this service increasingly were sourcing their silicones from Asian manufactures at prices that
often were 15%–20% below DC’s. In a business whose profitability was sensitive to capacity utilization
and scale, losing this volume had begun to hurt the company’s over-all bottom line.

In 2002, Dow Corning CEO Gary Anderson asked Don Sheets to form a team to start a new business
which was named Xiameter. Sheets’ charter: Without compromising on profitability, figure out a
business model that can sell high-quality silicones at 15% lower prices. This was the value proposition.
To reach a 15% lower price point (in a commoditizing material, a huge reduction), overheads had to be
absolutely minimal. Sheets’ team decided that meant customers had to order from the company’s
catalogue of existing, standard products: There could be no custom-engineering. Only orders of full
tank-cars would be accepted. And customers could not talk to a Xiameter salesperson by phone: All
orders had to be placed online. Because high turns of inventory and assets were critical to achieving
comparable profitability with the mainstream business, Xiameter orders could not be serviced from
inventory, customers had to wait until their orders could be shipped from scheduled production. To
minimize overhead Sheets knew he needed confident, knowledgeable employees who could make fast
decisions without hierarchical support. He therefore sought DC employees who, though team players,
didn’t quite fit in the DC culture. When he interviewed candidates with the needed skills, he asked
them to decide before they left the room whether they would accept the job. The new venture would
be low-touch, service averse, and standardized.

Sheets next needed to determine whether this new venture, with its new rules, norms and metrics,
could succeed within the confines of DC’s core enterprise. He set up an experimental war game to test
how existing DC staff and systems would react to the needs of Xiameter’s customer value proposition.
Xiameter was crushed in the simulation, as entrenched habits and existing processes thwarted attempts
to change the game. It was clear that while Xiameter could leverage DC’s manufacturing capacity, the
administrative systems and rules that Xiameter required were so foreign to DC thinking that, even with
the best intentions, attempting to leverage any other DC resources or processes would destroy that

10

This document is authorized for use only in Prof. Manjari Singh, Prof. M. P. Ram Mohan's Senior Management Programme (SMP-BL12) 2023 at Indian Institute of Management - Ahmedabad
from Oct 2023 to Apr 2024.
Module Note—What Are Business Models, and How Are They Built? 610-019

which was required to succeed. The way ahead was clear: Xiameter required a separate business model,
in its own business unit.

A rule that emerged from this simulation was that the only “leveraging” of the resources and
processes of the core DC business that would be allowed was when Xiameter “pulled” them into
Xiameter. DC could not “push” any of its resources or processes onto Xiameter, because the motivation
for conferring such corporate “gifts” onto Xiameter typically would be to spread overhead costs.

In a similar vein, when electronics retailer Best Buy acquired Geek Squad (an in-home computer
services and support company) CEO Brad Anderson announced, “Geek Squad bought Best Buy, not
the other way around.” He knew that certain synergies would produce growth for the company, but
sensed that the low margin, high volume, retail mentality of Best Buy could easily suffocate the high-
touch, higher-margin service orientation of Geek Squad. Anderson let Geek Squad pull from Best Buy
only those resources and processes that would help them grow and thrive. No pushing was allowed.

Finally, Anderson and Sheets agreed that they would keep Xiameter’s initial scale small. New
businesses that achieve success typically must make several revisions in the details within the four-box
diagram of their business models before they strive for scale. Careful business model design can
shorten these iterations. But business model innovators must initially focus on learning as much as on
executing. (This requires being patient for growth (to allow for learning as the market opportunity
unfolds) but impatient for profit (to be focused on validating as early as possible a working business
model). A profitable business is the best early indication of a viable model.)

Xiameter paid back DC’s investment in three months and became a major, transformative success.
Corporate revenues increased nearly 40%, because most of Xiameter’s customers were new to the
company. Far from cannibalizing existing customers, Xiameter has actually supported DC’s core
business, allowing its salespeople to more easily enforce premium pricing for their core offerings while
providing a viable alternative for the price conscious.

11

This document is authorized for use only in Prof. Manjari Singh, Prof. M. P. Ram Mohan's Senior Management Programme (SMP-BL12) 2023 at Indian Institute of Management - Ahmedabad
from Oct 2023 to Apr 2024.

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