Creating Profit Through Alliances - business models for collaboration E-book | Page 48

When Sofa put the Checkout test version online, they noticed through the discussions on Internet forums where most interest was to be found: among smaller starting-up shops with just a few cashiers. In less than 2.5 years since then, some 3500 shops have purchases a license, 95% of them outside the Netherlands23. Unique products, once they acquire some degree of name recognition, are therefore picked out and promoted by the market itself. But for this, search engines and Internet forums are essential. Joint R&D In an R&D alliance, product development or innovation can be achieved if both parties have something to learn from each other. The more knowledge the firms share, the greater the chance of achieving success, but if there are no clear arrangements in place with respect to sharing the revenue, the greater, also, the chance that your partner will forge ahead on his own. This is particularly true for the initial explorative phase in the collaboration, and less so during the subsequent phase of marketing the invention or innovation. An R&D alliance implies an interaction between:   the structure of the alliance: this structure should offer both a partnership form to share knowledge, but also protect against the partner's opportunistic behaviour, and the breakthrough or innovation that is either sought or found: which of the parties stands to benefit most, and who has the greatest influence on its successful marketing? The unpredictability of what the research will achieve demands a lot of flexibility from the partners 24. Often, the business model needs to be modified during the 46 course of the development process, for example because just 1 of the partners stand to gain commercial benefit from a research result. It has been studied to a slight extent how this process can best be managed. For innovative ICT services, the 'Freeband Business Blueprint Method' 25 has been developed, which can seemingly be applied to other fields as well. It involves a process in which information is added gradually (see Figure 21). In the first step, a business model is sketched in rough outline using a number of basic questions about the service concept, the technological architecture, the organisation and the financial arrangements. This first step can be seen as a Quick Scan. Phase 2 Phase 3 Acceptable distribution of tasks Acceptable profit model Value for service providers Viability business model Partner selection Network orchestration Outsourcing Joint network strategy Clear definition of the target group Customer value Service provisioning and processes Version management Branding Appealing value proposition Trust Quality of the provisioning system Personalisation Critical success factors Critical design factors Figure 21. Freeband business blueprint method In the second step, the rough sketch is evaluated in the light of six critical success factors. The third step is devoted to the further refinement and detailing of the business model, with reference to critical design factors. Some of these factors, such as staffing and network orchestration, may require some more explanation in branches outside ICT.