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Business Model Canvas: a tool for defining Business Models (part 9)

Key Partnerships This is one of last posts of this series devoted to the Bisiness Model Canvas tool developed by Alexander Osterwalder and Yves Pigneur. During the progress of this subject I introduced the tool and presented seven of the nine building blocks of it: customer segments, value proposition, channels, customer relationships, revenue streams, key resources and key activities. Before you continue reading this article I recommend you to read those posts because they are very important in order to understand how the tool works.

Stated the above, in this writing I will talk about the next building block of the Business Model Canvas: Key Partnerships. Partners have been very important since a long time ago, but today when business models have a core business and try to outsource everything that does not belongs to this business, they have become much more important. This is the reason why it is basic to define the different partners that will hold up the operation of our model. In this way we must ask ourselves whoa are our partners and suppliers taking into account which key resources and key activities are hold by them.

 

¿What type of alliances can we make and why?

As I mentioned earlier we might decide to make alliances so that some other company performs some of our activities or that it provides resources that are primary for our business. However not all the alliances are the same. Osterwalder and Pigneur distinguish between four types of societies that I mention next:

Before a company determines a type of alliance it must first analyze what is what it needs and which type of alliance will provide the highest benefit. The idea is that both firms get the most out of the alliance. Among the reasons that may move the firms in order to create an alliance we can mention the following:

 

Taking into the account what was just stated, and the blocks I have been describing, I just only need to explain the last building block: cost structure. Expect it in my next post.

 

Image taken from Flickr.com

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