Communicating The Business Model at a Swedish Start-Up: An Interpretive Study

Purpose: Although the notion of articulating and communicating ideas is central to theories of business models, the current literature has scarcely explored how business models are used and communicated by practitioners. The label “business model” itself can both organize and construct beliefs a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Emelie Havemo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Aalborg University Press 2019-09-01
Series:Journal of Business Models
Online Access:https://somaesthetics.aau.dk/index.php/JOBM/article/view/3418
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spelling doaj-49b006e357b94c5e8865eed66647b5962021-02-27T14:18:48ZengAalborg University PressJournal of Business Models2246-24652019-09-017210.5278/ojs.jbm.v7i2.3418Communicating The Business Model at a Swedish Start-Up: An Interpretive StudyEmelie HavemoPurpose: Although the notion of articulating and communicating ideas is central to theories of business models, the current literature has scarcely explored how business models are used and communicated by practitioners. The label “business model” itself can both organize and construct beliefs and actions. The purpose of this paper is to explore the roles of practitioner-described business models by using an interpretive approach. Design/Methodology/Approach: The study is based on the case study of a Swedish technology start-up with a business model labelled “hardware plus software”. The firm’s conceptualizations of this business model in public and non-public sources were analysed in order to show how a practitioner-described business model was used. Findings and Contributions: The business model label can be used at different organizational levels using different levels of abstraction, and may include multiple—and sometimes conflicting—perspectives. The paper shows how a practitioner-defined business model label served as a communication device by supporting three roles: communicating strategy, learning from others, and articulating identity. Originality/Value: The study introduces the notion of the business model as a communication device by showing how the label itself both enables and constrains interpretations of the firm in practice. The finding of parallel representations contradicts the implicit assumption that firms refer to a “single business model” by showing the diversity of articulations of the business model depending on the time frame, the role of the communicator, and communication arenas.   https://somaesthetics.aau.dk/index.php/JOBM/article/view/3418
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emelie Havemo
spellingShingle Emelie Havemo
Communicating The Business Model at a Swedish Start-Up: An Interpretive Study
Journal of Business Models
author_facet Emelie Havemo
author_sort Emelie Havemo
title Communicating The Business Model at a Swedish Start-Up: An Interpretive Study
title_short Communicating The Business Model at a Swedish Start-Up: An Interpretive Study
title_full Communicating The Business Model at a Swedish Start-Up: An Interpretive Study
title_fullStr Communicating The Business Model at a Swedish Start-Up: An Interpretive Study
title_full_unstemmed Communicating The Business Model at a Swedish Start-Up: An Interpretive Study
title_sort communicating the business model at a swedish start-up: an interpretive study
publisher Aalborg University Press
series Journal of Business Models
issn 2246-2465
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Purpose: Although the notion of articulating and communicating ideas is central to theories of business models, the current literature has scarcely explored how business models are used and communicated by practitioners. The label “business model” itself can both organize and construct beliefs and actions. The purpose of this paper is to explore the roles of practitioner-described business models by using an interpretive approach. Design/Methodology/Approach: The study is based on the case study of a Swedish technology start-up with a business model labelled “hardware plus software”. The firm’s conceptualizations of this business model in public and non-public sources were analysed in order to show how a practitioner-described business model was used. Findings and Contributions: The business model label can be used at different organizational levels using different levels of abstraction, and may include multiple—and sometimes conflicting—perspectives. The paper shows how a practitioner-defined business model label served as a communication device by supporting three roles: communicating strategy, learning from others, and articulating identity. Originality/Value: The study introduces the notion of the business model as a communication device by showing how the label itself both enables and constrains interpretations of the firm in practice. The finding of parallel representations contradicts the implicit assumption that firms refer to a “single business model” by showing the diversity of articulations of the business model depending on the time frame, the role of the communicator, and communication arenas.  
url https://somaesthetics.aau.dk/index.php/JOBM/article/view/3418
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