Brands
Discover
Events
Newsletter
More

Follow Us

twitterfacebookinstagramyoutube
Youtstory

Brands

Resources

Stories

General

In-Depth

Announcement

Reports

News

Funding

Startup Sectors

Women in tech

Sportstech

Agritech

E-Commerce

Education

Lifestyle

Entertainment

Art & Culture

Travel & Leisure

Curtain Raiser

Wine and Food

YSTV

ADVERTISEMENT
Advertise with us

Business Model Economics for Startups

Business Model Economics for Startups

Thursday May 17, 2012 , 3 min Read

As explained in my previous post, it is the numbers that count. It is the business model economics that decide whether the business is viable. Hence, it is crucial to carefully define and communicate your business model, and then analyze the model and identify the key ratios and metrics that drive the dynamics and outcomes of your business model.“In order to assess a potential business model, entrepreneurs must uncover the nature of its ‘profit engine’ which is often obscured by ambitious financial and market projections. Entrepreneurs must ask themselves whether their business concept can be translated into a viable, profitable business venture and how much cash it will take to achieve that result.”

This quote is taken from an article entitled “Note on Business Model Analysis for the Entrepreneur”, published by Harvard Business School in January 2002. The article explains how business model analysis should focus on 4 key areas:

  • Revenue Sources – identify the key revenue streams and the size and importance of the different revenue resources, then disaggregate the revenue data to uncover the key revenue drivers
  • Cost Drivers – identify the cost components that have the greatest impact on your cost structure, then disaggregate the cost data to uncover the key cost drivers
  • Critical Success Factors – identify the key drivers and metrics that are most important to achieving your profit goals
  • Investment Size – identify how much cash is needed to launch the business and how much working capital is needed to sustain the business, then determine the total investment size to achieve positive cash flow

While not necessarily easy, this approach to business model analysis will deliver some significant benefits for you and your business. It will help to:

  1. Quantify the viability of your business model, decide when to correct the course and take appropriate actions.
  2. Develop an understanding of the key drivers and metrics that influence your business so you can develop specific, targeted strategies
  3. Raise funds by giving you better insights into the activities and resources required to be successful, and understand how much cash is needed to get to profitability.

It also enables you to demonstrate to investors that you truly know your business and what is needed to be successful. Ultimately, that is what gives them confidence that you are worth investing in.

How does this approach to business model economics fit into your overall strategy and business plan? Here’s a flow that I observe that has worked well: you still start with the problem you are solving and the way your product or service solves this problem in a unique and compelling way. You then look at the business model: what is your value proposition, who is your target market, what is your “Go to Market” strategy, and how do you generate revenue and profit. From there, it is a logical step to start the business model analysis as explained above and identify the revenue sources, costs components and the key drivers that impact both of these. The next step is to ensure that your growth strategy and Goto Market activities are specifically focused on these critical areas and targeted to drive the identified metrics in the right direction. Finally, you can identify how much cash is needed to execute your strategy and perform the activities to break even.

Investors rarely believe the financial projections that startups show them. What they do believe, however, are smart entrepreneurs who have a thorough understanding of their business and combine an innovative product with solid business model economics. So for both the investor and the entrepreneur, it is the numbers that count.

Here is Pieter's earlier post on 'Valleys of The East'.