viernes, 16 de septiembre de 2011

Component business models


Open communication standards and plummeting transaction costs have ushered in the era of specialization. Industry dynamics are changing substantially, presenting firms with new opportunities to create or destroy value. No matter how large, individual firms can no longer expect to control end-to-end industry value chains. Instead, they must specialize in areas where they command an absolute advantage in the marketplace. 

Easily said. But putting specialization into practice with the right operating model requires executives to think differently, not only about the construct of the company but also about the interrelationships of the assets they rely on to provide value to the marketplace. Component business models offer a proven approach to driving a specialized focus, both internally and externally.  Internally, components help firms rethink the leverage they can achieve with the assets and capabilities they own.  Externally, components help firms source specialized capabilities that they cannot feasibly create themselves.  Combining these types of specialization allows firms to redefine their competitive positions in the face of the sweeping changes in their industries, while simultaneously achieving the competing benefits of scale, flexibility and efficiency

Competing in the era of specialization

During the last decade, businesses across the globe struggled to comprehend and adapt to the changes brought on by the ubiquitous growth of information technology and the Internet. Today, those uncertainties are no longer so uncertain; the tech-driven upheavals of the 1990s and early 2000s have coalesced into a new, eradefining set of imperatives. Widespread adoption of standard communication technologies (such as the Web, e-mail and instant messaging) and enterprise software packages (most notably in the areas of customer relationship management and enterprise resource planning) have given firms many of the same channel capabilities as well as a similar outlook on their organizations. At the same time, open data standards like XML have made it possible to automate transactions, driving a dramatic increase in flexibility and a “race to the bottom” in transaction costs.The convergence of these forces has formed what is, in effect, a global connectivity platform. The almost universal ability to plug into this platform has removed many traditional barriers to entry. As new entrants flood the marketplace, customers are finding it easier than ever to switch providers, creating an unprecedented opportunity for firms to create value – or lose out to competitors who do.  In this environment, only specialization – a laser-like focus on the few activities that confer real advantage and profit – will enable firms to deliver full value to their key stakeholder groups of customers, employees and shareholders. As the implications of the global connectivity platform ripple out through the marketplace, firms face a fundamental need for specialization on two parallel tracks: external and internal.


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