Tuesday, October 20, 2009

The business of business...

Continuing with thoughts on business models...

To exist, businesses must deliver value to its customers - this is different from the debate on creating value for shareholders vs stakeholders. Preferably, value must be tangible, but in some cases, it is notional. The industry that best demonstrates value creation is IT. Just imagine the time and effort wasted on mundane tasks everyday if we didn't have Windows and Microsoft Office.

Of course, value creation is not as obvious in all cases. Entertainment and television, for example. Some people would argue that television is turning us into morons and is actually value destroying. Yet, the industry is exploding. This is a case of notional value, where people are ready to lap up any and every form of entertainment. It can be risky to bet on such models because they fundamentally rely on exploiting consumer preferences. Very similar to what the fashion industry does. The value created is not by clothing people but rather by making people feel that their clothes are better than others. This is also the business model of our local quack, palmist and other fortune tellers – they all make the consumer feel better.

The ability to deliver notional value on top of real value is the holy grail of a successful business. Which means, not only is the product good, but you also take pride in ownership. The ipod and iphone are perfect examples. World-class products enhanced by the “Apple” brand. Even here, the relative magnitude of the tangible and notional values matter. So long as the tangible value is much larger than the notional one, the business is stable. Microsoft, for example, probably has a negative notional value, but is yet a profitable business because it offers unmatched tangible value. On the other hand, FMCG products do have some tangible value, but rely heavy on notional value. I doubt if any of us can differentiate between two shampoos in a blind test.

The simplest way to check whether a business adds value is to ask if it helps people do stuff “faster, better and cheaper”. Ideally, all three aspects must be addressed but sometimes addressing even two is okay.

1 comment:

  1. But then, like you said, only tangible value addition can be defined in terms of faster, better, cheaper.

    The soap operas on TV definitely make you slow, worse and have huge opportunity costs.
    I will go with SitComs only :)

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