E - Business Models: Module-I - 5
E - Business Models: Module-I - 5
Module-I
Lecture 5
ARVIND BANGER
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
DEAPARTMENT OF MANAGEMENT
FACULTY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES
D.E.I.
E -Business Models
Business model describes a broad range of informal and formal
models that are used by enterprises to represent various aspects of
business, such as operational processes, organizational structures, and
financial forecasts.
Although the term can be traced to the 1950s, it achieved mainstream
usage only in the 1990s.
Many different conceptualizations of business models exist The
model proposed by Osterwalder (2004) synthesises the different
conceptualizations into a single reference model based on the
similarities of a large range of models.
Consumers
Customers
Allies
Suppliers
According to Rappa:
The relationship between the generic e - business models and the business model.
E -Business Models - Rappa
Technological factors
Competitive dynamic among companies
Competitive dynamic between companies and their
channel partners
Customer expectations and preferences
Other things.
E -Business Models
The Internet opened the door to new business opportunities,
but many Internet-based enterprises failed because they had
not clearly thought through their modelparticularly, how
money would be made.
No. Every firm, wherever they compete (the Internet or the real
world), needs a market with customers and has to offer services
and/products at a certain price at a certain cost.