What are Business Models? Developing a Theory of Performative Representations

Despite a rich extant literature, it is unclear what business models are. We assess three dominant conceptions of business models in the academic literature: as transactional structures, value extracting devices, and mechanisms for structuring the organization. To overcome the shortcomings of these approaches, we draw on theories of performativity, social typecasting, and managerial cognition. We propose an alternative conception of business models as performative representations that work in three ways: as narratives that convince, typifications that legitimate, and recipes that guide social action. Rather than actual features of firms, business models are representations that allow managers to articulate and instantiate the value of new technologies.

[1]  Ramon Casadesus-Masanell,et al.  Strategy vs. business models vs. tactics , 2009 .

[2]  H. J. Smith,et al.  The power of business models , 2005 .

[3]  Steven Boivie,et al.  Sorting things out: valuation of new firms in uncertain markets , 2004 .

[4]  D. Schoen,et al.  The Reflective Practitioner: How Professionals Think in Action , 1985 .

[5]  W. Powell,et al.  Interorganizational Collaboration and the Locus of Innovation: Networks of Learning in Biotechnology. , 1996 .

[6]  Joan C. Woodward Industrial Organization: Theory and Practice , 1966 .

[7]  H. Chesbrough,et al.  The Role of the Business Model in Capturing Value from Innovation: Evidence from Xerox Corporation's Technology Spin-Off Companies , 2002 .

[8]  Terri L. Griffith,et al.  Information Technology and the Changing Fabric of Organization , 2007, Organ. Sci..

[9]  Fabrizio Ferraro,et al.  Economics Language and Assumptions: How Theories Can Become Self-Fulfilling , 2003 .

[10]  George S. Yip Using Strategy to Change Your Business Model , 2004 .

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

[12]  Ghislaine M. Lawrence The social construction of technological systems: new directions in the sociology and history of technology , 1989, Medical History.

[13]  T. Kostova,et al.  Institutional Theory in the Study of Multinational Corporations: A Critique and New Directions , 2008 .

[14]  Michael H. Morris,et al.  The entrepreneur's business model: toward a unified perspective , 2005 .

[15]  Yves Pigneur,et al.  Clarifying Business Models: Origins, Present, and Future of the Concept , 2005, Commun. Assoc. Inf. Syst..

[16]  Quy Nguyen Huy,et al.  How Entrepreneurs Use Symbolic Management to Acquire Resources , 2007 .

[17]  C. Marlene Fiol,et al.  A Semiotic Analysis of Corporate Language: Organizational Boundaries and Joint Venturing , 1989 .

[18]  Michael A. Rappa,et al.  The utility business model and the future of computing services , 2004, IBM Syst. J..

[19]  J.-C. Spender,et al.  Industry recipes : an enquiry into the nature and sources of managerial judgement , 1989 .

[20]  R. Normann,et al.  From value chain to value constellation: designing interactive strategy. , 1993, Harvard business review.

[21]  M. Zimmerman,et al.  Beyond Survival: Achieving New Venture Growth by Building Legitimacy , 2002 .

[22]  H. Chesbrough Why Companies Should Have Open Business Models , 2007 .

[23]  Steven Casper,et al.  NATIONAL INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORKS AND THE HYBRIDIZATION OF ENTREPRENEURIAL BUSINESS MODELS: THE GERMAN AND UK BIOTECHNOLOGY SECTORS , 2001 .

[24]  Andrew D. Brown Making Sense of Inquiry Sensemaking , 2002 .

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

[26]  M. Lounsbury Cultural Entrepreneurship: Stories, Legitimacy and the Acquisition of Resources , 2001 .

[27]  C. D. Cock Essal: Reflections on Fiction, Representation, and Organization Studies: An Essay with Special Reference to the Work of Jorge Luis Borges , 2000 .

[28]  Ezra W. Zuckerman,et al.  The Categorical Imperative: Securities Analysts and the Illegitimacy Discount , 1999, American Journal of Sociology.

[29]  Barbara Czarniawska Narrating the Organization: Dramas of Institutional Identity , 1997 .

[30]  Yiannis Gabriel Storytelling In Organizations , 2000 .

[31]  Yiannis Gabriel,et al.  Storytelling in Organizations: Facts, Fictions, and Fantasies , 2000 .

[32]  C. Bartlett,et al.  Linking organizational context and managerial action: The dimensions of quality of management , 2007 .

[33]  M. Ventresca,et al.  Cultural Change : Frame Analysis of Business Model Public Talk , 1975 – 2000 , 2005 .

[34]  Paul Jeffcutt,et al.  From Interpretation to Representation in Organizational Analysis: Postmodernism, Ethnography and Organizational Symbolism , 1994 .

[35]  Michael Hannan,et al.  Foundations of a Theory of Social Forms , 2000 .

[36]  D. MacKenzie,et al.  Constructing a Market, Performing Theory: The Historical Sociology of a Financial Derivatives Exchange1 , 2003, American Journal of Sociology.

[37]  C. Hardy,et al.  Discourse and Institutions , 2004 .

[38]  G. Carroll,et al.  Why the Microbrewery Movement? Organizational Dynamics of Resource Partitioning in the U.S. Brewing Industry1 , 2000, American Journal of Sociology.

[39]  C. Hardy,et al.  Discourse as a Strategic Resource , 2000 .

[40]  David G. McKendrick,et al.  On the Genesis of Organizational Forms: Evidence from the Market for Disk Arrays , 2000 .

[41]  M. Callon What Does It Mean to Say That Economics Is Performative? , 2006, Do Economists Make Markets?.

[42]  D. MacKenzie An Engine, Not a Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets , 2006 .

[43]  J. Bruner The Narrative Construction of Reality , 1991, Critical Inquiry.

[44]  D. MacKenzie,et al.  Do Economists Make Markets?: On the Performativity of Economics , 2007 .

[45]  Whinston,et al.  Business Models for Internet Based E-Commerce , 2000 .

[46]  S. Winter,et al.  Replication as Strategy , 2001 .

[47]  Andrew D. Brown,et al.  Narrative, Organizations and Research , 2005 .

[48]  Amin Rajan,et al.  In the age of the smart machine , 1990 .

[49]  Giovanni Gavetti,et al.  Capabilities, cognition, and inertia: evidence from digital imaging , 2000 .

[50]  J. Walsh Managerial and Organizational Cognition: Notes from a Trip Down Memory Lane , 1995 .

[51]  J. Austin How to do things with words , 1962 .

[52]  Stephen Downing,et al.  The Social Construction of Entrepreneurship: Narrative and Dramatic Processes in the Coproduction of Organizations and Identities , 2005 .

[53]  B. Mahadevan Business Models for Internet-Based E-Commerce: An Anatomy , 2000 .

[54]  Clayton M. Christensen,et al.  Explaining the attacker's advantage: Technological paradigms, organizational dynamics, and the value network , 1995 .

[55]  H. Thomas,et al.  Competitive Groups as Cognitive Communities: The Case of Scottish Knitwear Manufacturers Revisited , 1989 .

[56]  J. Rochet,et al.  Two-sided markets: a progress report , 2006 .

[57]  R. Amit,et al.  The fit between product market strategy and business model: implications for firm performance , 2008 .

[58]  R. J. Bogumil,et al.  The reflective practitioner: How professionals think in action , 1985, Proceedings of the IEEE.