Value Creation from Application Service Provisioning: Lessons from Four Vendor Firms

This paper embraces the electronic business model concept as the unit of analysis for investigating application service providers (ASPs). It develops three constructs fundamental to the ASP business model: strategic positioning, product/service portfolio, and customer value proposition. Four short case study examples of different ASP business models are discussed. The findings suggest that, despite firm efforts to strategically differentiate their ASP business model from their rivals, each failed to provide the customer with an attractive value proposition to achieve a sustainable competitive position.

[1]  R. Amit,et al.  Value creation in E‐business , 2001 .

[2]  Wendy L. Currie,et al.  Vendor Strategies for Business Process and Applications Outsourcing: Recent Findings from Field Research , 2003 .

[3]  Andrew B. Whinston,et al.  Understanding the Service Component of Application Service Provision: An Empirical Analysis of Satisfaction with ASP Services , 2003, MIS Q..

[4]  Vallabh Sambamurthy,et al.  Shaping UP for E-Commerce: Institutional Enablers of the Organizational Assimliation of Web Technologies , 2002, MIS Q..

[5]  Peter Weill,et al.  Place to Space: Migrating to Ebusiness Models , 2001 .

[6]  M. Porter What is strategy , 2000 .

[7]  Wendy L. Currie,et al.  Exploring the supply-side of IT outsourcing: evaluating the emerging role of application service providers , 2001, Eur. J. Inf. Syst..

[8]  Christina Soh,et al.  BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS ELECTRONIC MARKETPLACES: A STRATEGIC ARCHETYPES APPROACH , 2002 .

[9]  Peter Weill,et al.  FROM PLACE TO SPACE: Migrating to Profitable Electronic Commerce Business Models , 2001 .

[10]  Peter Weill,et al.  The Relationship Between Investment in Information Technology and Firm Performance: A Study of the Valve Manufacturing Sector , 1992, Inf. Syst. Res..

[11]  R. Yin Case Study Research: Design and Methods , 1984 .

[12]  J. Fitzgerald,et al.  The Manufacturing Sector , 1996 .

[13]  L. Willcocks,et al.  Netsourcing: Renting Business Applications and Services Over a Network , 2002 .

[14]  Yannis Bakos,et al.  The emerging role of electronic marketplaces on the Internet , 1998, CACM.

[15]  BaruaAnitesh,et al.  Understanding the service component of application service provision , 2003 .

[16]  K. Eisenhardt Building theories from case study research , 1989, STUDI ORGANIZZATIVI.

[17]  John Hagel Out of The Box: Strategies for Achieving Profits Today and Growth Tomorrow Through Web Services , 2002 .

[18]  Arie Y. Lewin,et al.  Managing partnerships and strategic alliances: raising the odds of success , 2000 .

[19]  Izak Benbasat,et al.  The Case Research Strategy in Studies of Information Systems , 1987, MIS Q..

[20]  Wendy L. Currie,et al.  Delivering Business Critical Information Systems As A Service: A Taxonomy Of Application Service Providers , 2000, ICSTM.

[21]  D. Silverman Interpreting Qualitative Data , 1993 .

[22]  SambamurthyV.,et al.  Shaping up for e-commerce , 2002 .

[23]  J. Magretta Why business models matter. , 2002, Harvard business review.

[24]  Chris Bennett,et al.  Application Service Providers: Will They Succeed? , 2000, Inf. Syst. Frontiers.

[25]  R. Kauffman 1 BID TOGETHER , BUY TOGETHER : ON THE EFFICACY OF GROUP-BUYING BUSINESS MODELS IN INTERNET-BASED SELLING , 2001 .

[26]  Martin Putterill,et al.  New tools for the determination of e-commerce inhibitors , 2003, Decis. Support Syst..