Text book:
Harvard Business Review on Rebuilding Your Business Model
Source: Harvard Business Press Books
288 pages. Publication date: Jun 15, 2011
Complementary materials for each lecture determined by the
theoretical themes:
Lecture 1: Introduction: Definition and Business
Model Frameworks
Readings:
Text book, chapter 4: Magretta,J., (2011) Why Business Models
Matter, Harvard Business Review on Rebuilding Your Business
Model
Text book, chapter 8: Zook, C., (2011) Finding Your Next Core
Business, Harvard Business Review on Rebuilding Your Business
Model
Teece, D. J. (2010) Business Models, Business Strategy and
Innovation. Long Range Planning, 43, 172-194.
Zott, C., Amit, R. (2010) Business Model Design: An Activity System
Perspective. Long Range Planning, 43, 216-226
Lecture 2: Business Models and Strategy
Readings:
Text book, chapter 9: Bower, J., and Christensen, M., (2010),
Distributive Technologies: Catching the Wave, Harvard Business
Review on Rebuilding Your Business Model
Chesbrough, H., Rosenbloom, R. S. (2002) The Role of the Business
Model in Capturing Value from Innovation: Evidence From Xerox
Corporation’s Technology Spin-Off Companies. Industrial and
Corporate Change, 11 (3), 529-555.
Shafer, S. M., Smith, H. J., Linder, J. C. (2005) The Power of
Business Models, Business Horizons, 48, 199-207.
Lecture 3: Sustainability and Business
Models
Readings:
Kanter, R., M., (2010), From Spare Change to Real Change: The
Social Sector as Beta Site for Business Innovation, Harvard
Business Review on Business Model Innovation
Nidumolu, R., et al (2011), Why Sustainability is Now the Key
Driver of Innovation, Greening Your Business Profitability,
Harvard Business Review on Greening Your Business
Yunus, M., et al (2010), Building Social Business Models: Lessons
from the Grameen Experience, Long Range Planning,
43: 308-325
Lecture 4: Open Innovation
Readings:
Text book, chapter 6: Kim, C., and Mauborgne, R.,(2011) Creating a
New Market Space, Harvard Business Review on Rebuilding Your
Business Model
Davila, T., Epstein, M., and Shelton, R. (2006) Making
Innovation Work, Wharton School Publishing, chapter 2
Chesbrough, H. (2003) The era of open innovation. MIT Sloan
Management Review, 44 (3): 77-82.
Chesbrough, H., Schwartz, K. (2007) Innovating Business Models with
Co-Development Partnership, Research Technology
Management, 55-59.
Goffin, K., Varnes, C., Van der Hoven, C., and Koners, U (2012),
Beyond the Voice of the Customer: Ethnographic Market Research,
Research Technology Management,
Lecture 5: Case study
To be announced.
Lecture 6: Servitization
Readings:
Chesbrough, H. (2011) Open Service Innovation: Rethinking Your
Business to Grow and Compete in a New Era. San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass, chapters 1 and 2
Cusumano, M. (2003) Business Models That Last: Balancing Products
and Services in Software and Other Industries. MIT Sloan School
of Management, 197, 1-22.
Ettlie, J., E., Rosenthal, S., R. (2011) Service versus
Manufacturing Innovation. Journal of Product Innovation Management,
28, 285-299.
Lecture 7:Mind-set and core-logic
Readings:
Text book, chapter 10: Anthony, S., Eyring, M., and Gibson, Lib,
(2011) Mapping Your Innovation Strategy, Harvard Business
Review on Rebuilding Your Business Model
Demil, B., Lecocq, X. (2010) Business Model Evolution: In Search Of
Dynamic Consistency. Long Range Planning, 43, 227-246.
Linder, J. C., Cantrell, S. (2001) Five Business-Model Myths That
Hold Companies Back. Strategy & Leadership, 29 (6),
13-18.
Linder, J. C., Cantrell, S. (2002) It’s All in the Mind (Set).
Across the board, 38-42.
Lecture 8: Multiple Business Models: Ambidextrous
Organizations
Readings:
O’Reilly, C., and Tushman, M., (2004), The Ambidextrous
Organization, Harvard Business Review
Osterwalder, A., Pigneur, Y. (2010) Business Model Generation.
Self-published, pp 232- 243
Casadesus-Masanell, R., and Tarziján, J., (2012), When One Business
Model Isn’t Enough, Harvard Business Review
Lecture 9: Business Models Framing
and Tipping Points
Readings:
Latour, B. (1994) On Technical Mediation-Philosophy, Sociology,
Genealogy,Common Knowledge, 3, (2), 29-64.
Callon, Michel (1986), Some Elements of a Sociology of Translation:
Domestication of the Scallops and the Fishermen of St Brieuc Bay,
pp. 196-233 inPower, Action and Belief: A New Sociology of
Knowledge, edited by John Law. London: Routledge & Kegan
Paul.
Lecture 10: Internal and external fit: Case study of Liz
Claiborne Inc.
Siggelkow, N (2001), Change in the Presence of Fit: The Rise, the
Fall, and the Renaissance of Liz Claiborne, Academy of
Management Journal, 44, (4),
836-857.
Lecture 11: Comprehensive review
To be announced.
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