scholarly journals Analyzing AgriFood-Tech e-Business Models

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 5516
Author(s):  
Maro Vlachopoulou ◽  
Christos Ziakis ◽  
Kostas Vergidis ◽  
Michael Madas

The agribusiness sector shows tremendous growth and sustainability prospects by exploiting the challenges of “AgriFood-Tech” business models in the digital environment, by encouraging innovation, accelerating institutional and structural change, enhancing productivity, and introducing new products and services to the market. The purpose of this study is to investigate different types of “AgriFood-Tech” digital models and analyze their role in the agribusiness and AgriFood sector. Based on relevant literature research, the authors present and discuss five indicative examples of “AgriFood-Tech” models, using the Business Model Canvas (BMC) framework. The methodology included the analysis of the components of innovative AgriFood innovative business models paradigms, such as distribution channels, key partnerships, customer selection and relationships, financial viability, and value proposition. The goal was to explore their building blocks and the required decisions that create, deliver, and capture value. Our findings highlight the importance of specific features of the models, including online sharing of information between the stakeholders, online searches of agri-products, and logistics services in the agribusiness sector.

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (01) ◽  
pp. 42
Author(s):  
Novitha Herawati ◽  
Triana Lindriati ◽  
Ida Bagus Suryaningrat

Business model canvas (BMC) is a strategic management and lean start-up template for developing new or documenting existing business models. It is a visual chart with elements describing a firm's or product's value proposition, infrastructure, customers, and finances. It assists firms in their aligning activities by illustrating potential trade-offs. Business model canvas focuses on the idea of creating value in a business. The purpose of implementation of BMC was to determined the best business planning of fried edamame, when it applied to the industry or MSMEs (Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises). The method in the research used descriptive method, while the data analysis used qualitative analysis. Primary data collection was obtained from interviews.  Analysis was done by compiling the initial hypothesis, hypothesis testing and verification of business model canvas (BMC). The results showed that the business model strategy for fried edamame products in the value proposition component were crispy, natural, labeled and applied good cooking oil for use. The customer segment component were the buyers of the entire Jember Regency including men and women over 20 years old with middle income. Components of revenue streams were fried edamame product sales, sale of unused oil, and sale of edamame peel to farmers, while the component channels were direct selling and retailers for fried edamame product. Keywords: business model, fried edamame, strategy, value proposition


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (23) ◽  
pp. 6711 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard W. Butler ◽  
Adam R. Szromek

This article discusses the need to expand the concept of the value proposition, in order that this business model component includes the value for a customer, the value captured by the enterprise, and the value for the community, as well as benefits for the natural environment. The objective of the article is to identify sustainable development components that have been proposed for tourist enterprises in the research literature. The article proposes actions to complement existing tourist enterprises business models in order to give them the characteristics of a sustainable business model and to implement practices of value creation for the community. The research notes that the value captured by an enterprise determines the level of implementation of its economic objectives resulting from the value creation for the customer and implementation of social objectives (including pro-ecologic ones). The revenues of an enterprise depend, first of all, on meeting the expectations of the customer, meaning that they depend on the value proposition for the customer, and their volume will allow researchers to determine the possibility of creating value for the community. The expected tendency to create value for the community is argued to be proportional to the effectiveness of customer value influence, less the value captured by the enterprise. After an initial review of relevant literature, attention is focused on health tourism enterprises and how these principals can be applied in that context.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Päivi Aro ◽  
Helena Ahola

<p><strong>DEVELOPING BUSINESS MODELS FOR THE UNDERGROUND LABS</strong><strong> </strong></p><p>The purpose of this case study is to describe the process of developing business models for the underground labs (ULs) and their network in a Baltic Sea Interreg project (BSUIN). The RQs are the following:</p><ul><li>What kind of business models the ULs in the project have?</li> <li>How could their business models be developed by focusing on specific customer segments and services and their value propositions?</li> <li>What kind of business model(s) could serve best the network of ULs?</li> </ul><p>Professional services, such as ULs also offer, can be characterized by high labour content, high customization and high customer contact. The distinguishing feature of these services is also their knowledge-intensive nature. Business model describes the logic of how a company intends to make money.  Business Model Canvas is a useful tool for describing, analyzing and designing business models. At the core in the business model is Value Proposition. The value proposition describes the benefits customers can expect from the services and products.</p><p>Service Design was used as an approach in the project. It is a mindset, a process, a toolset, a cross-disciplinary language and a human-centred management approach. Data was gathered by facilitating Service Design workshops and analyzed by qualitative methods. The research process consisted of three phases: 1) describing and analyzing the existing business models of the ULs 2) developing business models of the ULs focusing on specific customer segments and services and their value propositions, and 3) developing business models for the network of the ULs.</p><p>In the Exploration workshops the business models of the ULs were described and analyzed. It can be concluded that paying customer segments are few in number, and fixed costs are significant. Each UL is unique having specific know-how, expertise and infrastructure. </p><p>In Creation workshops the focus was on specific customer segments and services and their value propositions. The outcomes of the workshops were promising and recommendations for the ULs were made. ULs should look for new customer segments and create new services and value propositions. In addition, they should create and describe business models for the chosen customer segments and services.</p><p>In Reflection workshops business models for the network of the ULs were developed. The focus was particularly on core, supporting and additional services of the ULs. The core (essential) services are research infrastructure, underground infrastructure, site characterization and wide expertise for underground projects. A generic business model for the network was described based on the data, results, analyses and feedback of all the previous workshops.</p><p>It is challenging to develop business models for the ULs because they have not been business oriented. Every UL is unique, and the expertise is related to underground sciences. Business orientation would offer them an opportunity to boost underground scientific research which is the key element in the business model.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-158
Author(s):  
Michelle Carter ◽  
Chris Carter

Purpose Creative and cultural producers, like social enterprises, operate in a complex business environment where the value proposition is difficult to define, and the organisational motivations are not always financially driven. In the case of Australian visual artists, low incomes and limited access to government funding magnify the importance of developing sustainable business models. This paper aims to present the Creative Business Model Canvas (CBMC), a reinterpretation of Osterwalder and Pigneur’s CBMC (2010), for the benefit of a visual artist’s business planning. Design/methodology/approach This qualitative study uses data from semi-structured interviews to analyse and evaluate the effectiveness of the Osterwalder and Pigneur’s BMC (2010) for use by creative artists to understand the value of their artwork beyond traditional profit-driven business models. A modified canvas is presented to capture a clearer snapshot of creative arts practice with a focus on value propositions that possess dimensions of symbolic value. Findings This study found that the symbolic value of an artist’s practice is difficult to capture using Osterwalder and Pigneur’s CBMC (2010). An artist value proposition is composed of the artifact, artistic services and the artist’s identity. The creative CBMC, as a modified CBMC, captures aspects of the artistic identity such as professional achievements, personal life and the artist’s authenticity. Originality/value This study builds on Osterwalder and Pigneur’s CBMC and reimagines it for use by visual artists and art-based social enterprise organisations where the notion of value can be challenging to articulate.


2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-32
Author(s):  
Tatiana Domingues Almeida ◽  
Marianne Costa Avalone ◽  
Diego Castro Fettermann

Purpose Previous studies have identified a variety of Internet of Things (IoT) business models and have recognised the complexity related to the application of IoT technologies in business, along with the potential of the modularity concept application in organisational design. The purpose of this paper is to identify the main building blocks for the development of a business model canvas for companies that adopt the IoT in their business. Design/methodology/approach First, the authors carried a systematic literature review to identify theoretical, experimental and practical IoT business model canvas recorded in the literature. Then, the authors identified and analysed the characteristics of the building blocks present in these canvas using a statistical cluster technique. Based on the outcomes, the authors proposed a framework with standard and optional modules to allow flexible arrangements and suit different IoT business goals. Findings The results revealed that the IoT business model canvas recorded in the literature had been grossly designed to attend two drivers: manufacture and service organisations. Therefore, based on the frequency of building blocks present in IoT business model canvas recorded in the literature, it has been proposed two flexible frameworks which can be tailored to accommodate the immense variety of possibilities offered by IoT technologies in manufacture and service business. Practical implications The business model frameworks proposed in this research can support entrepreneurs structuring new IoT businesses or upgrading existing businesses. Originality/value This research offers a comprehensive IoT business model framework with their respective building blocks built from an extensive literature review.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 42-73
Author(s):  
Larysa Hlinenko ◽  
◽  
Yurii Daynovskyy ◽  

The aim of the article. Internet of Things (IoT) technologies deeply affect business development and, as a consequence, business models (BMs) as a way of doing business by its actors. Conventional firm-centric e-business models are not always good for the IoT due to its ecosystem nature; implementing innovative models faces a number of challenges. It is a BMC (Business Model Canvas) template that is mainly used to create business models at enterprise level. Modified in accordance with the specifics of IoT, BMC templates overcome the limitations of the classical BMC and provide interrelated BMC solutions for the different layers of the IoT architecture. However, all of these templates, when modelling value propositions, focus only on the current state of consumer needs. The models ignore the interdependencies between the allowable attribute values of the certain BMC blocks, in particular between key resources, value proposition and revenue model. The article aims to analyse the IoT business models based on BMC, to identify the effective values of individual components of the BMC and the expediency of combining them within a particular BM and to specify means of taking into account the changing state of consumer needs in the formation of the BMC components. Analyses results. The IoT outlines a paradigm relying on a continuous set of things which interact with forming a worldwide dynamic network. The functionality of the IoT device sets the technological constraints and perspectives for value propositions and revenue generation modesl. The analysis of the proposed variants of IoT BMC and their successful implementation cases provided for clarification and generalisation of effective value propositions consistent with IoT specificity. For each of these value propositions the compatible revenue models and required functions of IoT devices were identified. In accordance with the proposed sophisticated classification of the IoT device functionalities, the valid types of IoT devices as a key resource for the realisation of a particular value proposition were identified. The formation of the BM should start from developing the concept of value offered to the consumer. To be effective the creation of the value proposition should be preceded by the identification of the consumer need and the state of its satisfaction by existing means. This state can be the following one: the need exists, but is not recognized by consumers and is not satisfied by existing means at all; the need exists and is identified by consumers but is not satisfied by existing means at all; the need is clear to consumers but is not fully satisfied by existing means. In the first two cases, the value proposition should ensure meeting the need at a minimum sufficient level. In case the means of satisfying the need exist, it is necessary to assess the current state of satisfying the need and to determine the extent to which the proposed IoT solution would change this state. The lines of development of needs and means of their satisfaction, adapted to the specifics of the particular need and IoT at large, are proposed to be used for assessing the state of need satisfaction. Specificity of IoT requires supplementing the set of lines of development of needs and satisfaction means with the lines launched by IoT possibilities. Several such lines, in particular, the line of increasing the consumer's awareness and the line of increasing the ideality of the final need satisfaction, have been proposed. A matrix of need parameters has been developed to simplify the consideration of the content and state of need in the formation of value and revenue models. Conclusions and directions for further research. The importance of taking into account the characteristics of needs in value proposition design makes it necessary to identify "Needs" as a distinct BMC component described by a set of specific attributes. The values of these attributes, together with the resources of the participants, provide the basis for the value proposition content and affect the choice of the revenue model. Setting the attribute values requires determining the current and expected state of needs and the means of meeting them on relevant lines of development, the further elaboration and parameterisation of which, taking into account the specificity of IoT, is the subject of further research. The result of the digital service provided by the IoT device appears to be a key innovative element of the IoT value proposition. That suggests the separating the "IoT contribution" element in the "Value proposition" component of the BMC or introducing it as a BMC component to reflect the relevant digital service. The content of the service will determine the functionality of the IoT device and the IT infrastructure requirements. When defining the value proposition, the real change in the state of all the components of the IoT ecosystem causing changes in the prioritisation of individual needs should also be considered. Clarifying the concept of the value proposition, the needs it satisfies and the specific "IoT component" of value creates the basis for identifying consumer segments and the ways of interacting with them. Compatibility and effectiveness of the joint use of specific value propositions and revenue models as well as compliance of the value proposition content, cost and promotion to the target consumer demands should be also considered when specifying the blocks of BMC. The BMC is to be built for each of the ioT ecosystem partners. The present research recommendations refer mainly to developers and manufacturers of IoT devices and service providers; the construction of the BMC for other IoT system key players (platform providers/providers, system integrators and marketplace providers), as well as the problem of these models coordination, should be the subjects of separate research. Keywords: Internet of Things (IoT), business model, Business Model Canvas (BMC), value proposition, revenue model


2021 ◽  
pp. 75-90
Author(s):  
Jan Jonker ◽  
Niels Faber

AbstractThe BMT provides the building blocks to develop a logic for a business model. In such a model the nature of value creation, how value creation is organized, and how transactions are taking shape are operationalized so that they meet the proposition. Practice shows that at present business models aimed at capturing multiple value creation can be divided into three major categories: (1) platform business models, (2) community-based (or collective) business models, and (3) circular business models. The three archetypes differ mainly in the way in which they create value, as well as the objective, the mechanism through which value creation takes place, and the infrastructural and technological requirements. When using the BMT, it is useful to consider at an early stage which business model archetype is dominant in the realization of the intended value proposition. Choosing a business model archetype might look straightforward, but it can be quite a tricky task.


Author(s):  
B.Ye. Amirgaliyev ◽  
◽  
G. K. Yegemberdiyeva ◽  

The article is devoted to the research and analysis of the car-sharing service. Great attention is paid to the literature review, and different business models suitable for building a car-sharing service are examined. Based on existing business models for different types of car sharing, the authors have justified and presented a new business model canvas. Another focus of the article is the study of the legal aspects for the establishment of a carsharing service in Kazakhstan, as well as the analysis of potential risks and methods for their management.


Author(s):  
Iva Vojinović ◽  
Dušan Barać ◽  
Ivan Jezdović ◽  
Milica Labus ◽  
Filip Jovanović

This chapter will foster the understanding of the structure of business model elements in Internet of things field. Business model provides an efficient way to analyze, understand and manage strategically oriented goals for one or more stakeholders in order to create some value for end-users, but in the Internet of things there is not clear path for its development. An approach that will be used is the generally accepted principle of forming business model, Canvas template, which is a strategic template for understanding the relation between key partners, key activities, customers and clients, key resources, value proposition for customers in the form of products or services, relationships with customers, sales and distribution channels, cost structure, income flow. Presented is an integrated model with main aspects that should be covered when it comes to the Internet of things business model development, combining Canvas template, inside organizational structure and ecosystem restrictions.


PERSPEKTIF ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 169-178
Author(s):  
Agung Prawijaya ◽  
R. Hamdani Harahap ◽  
Erika Revida

The purpose of this study was to see modern market development with the Franchise concept and in collaboration with third parties opens a partnership space in the management of Village Business Stores carried out by BUMDes managers. This study aims to analyze the implementation of the business strategy developed by BUMDes-Mart Berkah Jatimulyo Village, Pegajahan District, Serdang Bedagai Regency, using the business model canvas as a tool to identify existing business models. This research uses descriptive qualitative research methods, data collection techniques by conducting literature studies and research in the field. Data analysis was carried out by collecting data, reducing data, presenting data and drawing conclusions. The results obtained are in the form of a description of the nine elements in the business model consisting of customer segments, value proposition, customer relationships, customer segments, channels, revenue streams, cost structure, key activities, key resources, key partners. This business model will find out the weaknesses and strengths of a business that is being run and to find out what strategies can be implemented in the future. In addition to these aspects, the findings in this study are that there are factors that influence the business model canvas on BUMDes-Mart, namely in terms of market and financial segments.


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