Business Model Generation: A Handbook for Visionaries, Game Changers, and Challengers

  • practical book about business model innovation
  • applied strategy book
  • beautiful and visual
  • with many exercises

Product DescriptionBusiness Model Generation is a practical, inspiring handbook for anyone striving to improve a business model or craft a new one.

1) Change the way you think about business models

Business Model Generation will teach you powerful and practical innovation techniques used today by leading companies worldwide. You will learn how to systematically understand, design, and implement a new business model or analyze and renovate an old one.

2) Co-created by 470 strategy practitioners

Business Model Generation practices what it preaches. Co-authored by 470 Business Model Canvas practitioners from 45 countries, the book was financed and produced independently of the traditional publishing industry. It features a tightly-integrated, visual, lie-flat design that enables immediate hands-on use.

3) Designed for doers

Business Model Generation is for those ready to abandon outmoded thinking and embrace new, innovative models of value creation: executives, consultants, entrepreneurs and leaders of all organizations.

Business Model Generation: A Handbook for Visionaries, Game Changers, and Challengers

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on Tuesday, March 9th, 2010 at 5:35 am and is filed under Business Info. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One Response to “Business Model Generation: A Handbook for Visionaries, Game Changers, and Challengers”

  1. Anders Sundelin Says:

    The book, written by Alexander Osterwalder and Yves Pigneur, co-created by 470 practioners, is a fascinating book for several reasons and I recommend people interested in learning about business models to read it. It is a compilation of 10 years of work on a simple idea; on how to capture the essence of how an organization creates and captures value. It is a book that I believe many will read and keep handy for reference.

    The book in three bullet points:

    * It presents a business model framework, based on nine building blocks, that is widely used by business model practioners today and it summarizes many popular management theories using the same framework.

    * It uses visual thinking and design in a way that is novel and refreshing in business literature, and provides several workshop ideas for companies that want to get their hands dirty applying the tools presented.

    * It provides many interesting business model examples such as Lego, Google, Nintendo Wii, Apple, Metro, Flickr, Red Hat, Skype, and more.

    At the core of the book is the business model canvas, developed by Alex during his PhD work, and it’s included in one form or another, on almost every page of the book. It is a graphical representation of the 9 business model components that Alex argues describe the rationale of how an organization creates, delivers, and captures value. It has created a shared language for describing, visualizing, assessing, and changing business models, and is widely used by business model innovation practioners.

    The book is divided into five main sections that can be read on their own:

    1. The business model canvas including definition and the nine building blocks: Customer Segments, Value Propositions, Channels, Customers Relationships, Revenue Streams, Key Resources, Key Activities, Key Partnerships and Cost Structure.

    2. Popular business model patterns including concepts from popular management literature such as Unbundling Business Models, The Long Tail, Multi-Sided Platforms, FREE as a Business Model and Open Business Models.

    3. Business model design, using concepts such as customer insights, ideation, visual thinking, prototyping, storytelling and scenarios.

    4. Strategy, including the business model environment, evaluating business models, business model perspective on blue ocean strategy and managing multiple business models.

    5. Business model design process, including a 5 step process: mobilize, understand, design, implement and manage.

    Alex and Yves covers a lot of management concepts in the book and use the business model canvas to illustrate key ideas from publications such as Unbundling the Corporation by John Hagel and Marc Singer (1999), The Long Tail by Chris Anderson (2006), Free: The Future of a Radical Price by Chris Anderson (2008), Co-Opetition by Adam Brandenburger and Barry Nalebuff (1996), Blue Ocean Strategy by Cahn Kim and Mauborgne, and Open Business Models by Henry Chesbrough (2006). The focus is very much to make complex things simple and understandable which is great for most readers! For readers that really want to understand the concepts I recommend reading the original books.

    Another strong focus of the book is the visual thinking, the analogies to architecture and design, using concepts such as ideation, prototyping and storytelling. The best way, according to the writers, is to print out the canvas on a large surface, put it on a wall and let people jointly sketch or use post-it notes to discuss and analyze business models. Alex has for several years worked together with designers and the design of the book is very different from traditional management literature and share more similarities with books such as The Back of the Napkin: Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures by Dan Roam.

    The book contains several interesting examples from companies such as Lego, Google, Nintendo Wii, Apple, Metro, Flickr, Red Hat, Skype, Rega, Gillette, Procter & Gamble, GSK and Innocentive. It uses the business model canvas to explain the rationale of each company’s business model and sometimes including the differences with traditional companies within the same industry.

    Besides the business model canvas the book comprises several hands-on tools such as The Empathy Map developed by XPLANE, “What If” questions, The Silly Cow Exercise, Techniques to develop stories, and questions to perform a detailed SWOT analysis of each business model component. It has a very practical focus and it is easy for companies to pick up the book and do some workshops on their own.

    A quick comparison with some other popular books on business models:

    * The Ultimate Competitive Advantage: Secrets of Continually Developing a More Profitable Business Model by Mitchel, Coles, Golisano and Knutson, has a heavier focus on marketing with some ideas and questions relating to one-sided business models, so if you are looking to “sell more” perhaps you like this book.

    * The Profit Zone: How Strategic Business Design Will Lead You to Tomorrow’s Profits by Slywotzky, Morrison and Andelman, has a heavier focus on profitability and the changing areas in which high profit is possible to keep, it is a quick read and perhaps complementary to The Business Model Generation that focus less on profitability.

    * Open Business Models: How to Thrive in the New Innovation Landscape by Henry Chesbrough has a heavier focus on technological innovation in the context of business models and also covers the important area of Intellectual Property in relation to open business models.

    * Getting to Plan B: Breaking Through to a Better Business Model by John Mullins and Randy Komisar, focus more on entrepreneurship and start-ups and on learning from experimentation and adjusting the business model, also with more focus on financials.

    All in all, The Business Model Generation is a great book and everyone interested in the subject should have a copy of it.

    //Anders, The Business Model Database
    Full disclosure: I was one of the 470 practitioners contributing to the book but I get no compensation from the authors or from book sales.
    Rating: 5 / 5

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