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Repetition 

Repetition . Service, Enabling service, Service platforms. Figure 1. Service execution and delivery activities, presented as numbered Use Cases (and Business Use Cases. Services / Service portfolios - Cash Flow optimisation problem.

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Repetition 

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  1. Repetition

  2. Service, Enabling service, Service platforms Figure 1. Service execution and delivery activities, presented as numbered Use Cases (and Business Use Cases.

  3. Services / Service portfolios - Cash Flow optimisation problem Figure 5. Phases in real option financing for NGIS R&D process

  4. On the State-of-the-art analysis of research on Business Modelling in IT systems (& communication)

  5. Contents • Overview of the knowledge on business modelling (BM) methodologies • BM Framework • BM Definitions • BM Components • BM Taxonomies • BM Representation Tools • Conclusion

  6. The overview of BM knowledge(limited to IT and communication services) • Authors who contributed to the SOTA systematisation: • Staehler 2001, • Gordijn 2002 • Pateli and Giaglis 2003 • Osterwalder 2004

  7. Figure 1. Business layers [ Osterwalder 2004]

  8. Figure 2. Business model place in the company [Osterwalder 2004]

  9. BM Framework BM Definitions BM Components BM Taxonomies BM Representation tools

  10. BM Definitions Some examples obtained from the SOTA

  11. Table 1. Business model author list [Pateli 2002, Osterwalder 2004]

  12. BM definitions • Osterwalder 2004 suggested the following working definition of the business model: A business model is a conceptual tool thatcontains a set of elements and their relationships and allows expressing a company's logic of earning money. It is a description of the value a company offers to one or several segments of customers and the architecture of the firm and its network of partners for creating, marketing and delivering this value and relationship capital, in order to generate profitable and sustainable revenuestreams. • Based on the folloowing BM Definitions Timmers 1998, Tapscot, Ticoll, Lowy 1998 2000, Linder and Cantrell 2000, Weil and Witale 2001, Rappa 2001, Hawkins 2001, Amit and Zott 2001, Applegate 2001, Petrovic et al. 2001, Osterwalder and Pigneur 2001, Magretta 2002, Elliot 2002

  13. Figure 10. Hamel's (2002) business model concept

  14. BM Components Some examples obtained from the SOTA

  15. BM Components • Alt and Zimmermann 2001 – Six generic elements: • Mission • Structure • Processes • Revenues • Technology • Legal issues

  16. BM Components • Auhah Tucci 2000 • Customer value • Scope • Pricing • Revenue Source • Connected Activities • Implementation • Capabilities • Sustainability

  17. BM Components • Chesgrough and Rosebloom 2000 • Business model functions • Articulate the value proposition • Identify the market segment • Define the structure of the value chain within the firm • Define the cost structure and profit potential • Describe the position of the firm within the value network, including identifications of complementors and competitors • Formulate the competitive strategy

  18. BM Components • Hamel 2000 • Framework for discussing the BM components • Customer Interface • Fulfilment and Support • Information and Insight • Relationship Dynamics • Pricing Structure • Core Strategy • Business Mission • Product Market Scope • Basis for Differentiation • Strategic Resources • Core Competencies • Strategic Assets • Core Processes • Value Network • Suppliers • Partners • Coalitions

  19. BM Components • Veill and Vitale 2001 – four levels • Level 1: Atomic Business Model • Level 2: E-Business Model • Level 3: E-Business Initiative • Level 3-4: Intermediate Level • Level 4: E-Business Implementation • Atomic elements: • Business Strategy • Organizational Form and Structure • Business Process • Value Chain • Core Competencies

  20. BM Components • Osterwalder and Pigneur 2002 • Four main pillars – principal issues that a BM has to address: • Product Innovation • Target Customer Segment • Capabilities • Value Proposition • Customer Relationship • Information Strategy • Feel and Serve • Trust and Loyalty • Infrastructure Management • Resources • Activity or Value configuration • Partner Network • Financials • Revenue Model • Cost Structure • Profit / Loss

  21. BM components • Gordijn and Akkermans 2001 - Value Ontology • Market Segment • Actors • Value Offering • Value Exchange • Value Object • Value Activity – Value Interface – Value Port

  22. BM Taxonomy Some examples obtained from the SOTA

  23. BM Taxonomy • Research efforts toward classifying BMs, mainly BMs over the Web, and grouping them under certain categories. • The BMs belonging to the same category usually share some common characteristics, such as the same pricing policy of the same customer relationship model. • Anyway, as the criteria for classifying BMs differentiate per researcher, the final resulting taxonomies are quite different.

  24. BM Taxonomy • Tapscott et al. 2000 • Five primary types of business webs • Agora • Aggregation • Value Chain • Alliance • Distributive Network

  25. Figure 8. b-webs (Tapscot, Ticoll et al. 2000)

  26. BM Taxonomy • Veill and Vitale 2001 • Content Provider • Direct to Customer • Full-Service Provider • Intermediary • Shared Infrastructure • Value Net Integrator • Virtual Community • Whole-of-Enterprise / Government

  27. Figure 6. Timmer's (1998) classification scheme

  28. BM Taxonomy • Applegate 2001 – Four categories • Focused Distributor Models • Retailer • Marketplace • Aggregator • Infomediary • Exchange • Portal Models • Horizontal portals • Vertical portals • Affinity portals • Producer Models • Manufacturer • Service Provider • Advisor • Information and News services • Custom Supplier • Infrastructure Provider Models – Infrastructure portals

  29. BM Representation Tools Some examples obtained from the SOTA

  30. BM Representation Tools • Tapscott et al. 2000 – Value Maps, for depicting how a b-web operates, or will operate in the future • Gordijn and Akkermans 2001 – Value ontology • Market Segment • Actors • Value Offering • Value Object • Value Activity – Value Interface – Value port • Weill and Vitale 2001– E-Business Model Schematics • Participants • Relations • Flows • Money flow • Information flow • Product and service flows

  31. Figure 11. Linder and Cantrell's (2000) business model concept

  32. Figure 12. Business model schematic of the direct to customer model (Weill and Vitale 2001)

  33. Figure 13. e3-value ontology for e-business (Gordijn, Akkermans et al. 2001)

  34. Table 9. Appraising a Business Model: Component Measures (Aufah and Tucci 2003)

  35. Table 11. The nine business model building blocks (Osterwalder 2004)

  36. Figure 15 The business Model Ontology, Osterwalder 2004

  37. The nine business model building blocks (Osterwalder 2004)

  38. The nine business model building blocks (Osterwalder 2004)

  39. Figure 16 Design of a Business Model based on Value Ontology (Gordijn and Akkermans, 2001)

  40. Gordijn 2002, Viewpoints, Requirements Engineering

  41. Figure 19 Value map for Cisco Systems according to Tapscott et al. (2000).

  42. Figure 21.Value model for a free Internet access service: the global actor viewpoint (Gordijn 2002).

  43. Figure 22.Actor a can decide to exchange value objects with actor b, or actor c Gordijn 2002. Figure 23.A value exchange can be in multiple transactions.

  44. Figure 25.Concepts and relations of the e3-value ontology extended for the detailed actor viewpoint. A composite actor and an elementary actor are generalized into an actor. Gordijn 2002

  45. Figure 27Value model for the free Internet case: the value activity viewpoint. must yield profit or should increase economic value for the performing actor (Gordijn 2002).

  46. Use Case Maps A UCM is a visual notation to be used by humans to understand the behavior of a system at a high level of abstraction (Buhr 1998).

  47. Gordijn 2002

  48. Gordijn 2002

  49. Conclusion - BM framework - Business Value model is not a Business Process Model - Business Process Model relates to a System Process Model - Relation Business Model and Business Plan ???

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