NYC
skills/smithery/ai/business-model-canvas

business-model-canvas

SKILL.md

Business Model Canvas - Strategic Business Design

Visual framework for developing, documenting, and iterating on business models. Created by Alexander Osterwalder, used worldwide by startups and enterprises.

When to Use This Skill

  • Evaluating new product or startup ideas
  • Analyzing competitor business models
  • Planning business pivots or expansions
  • Communicating strategy to stakeholders
  • Identifying gaps in current business model
  • Due diligence on investments or partnerships

The Nine Building Blocks

┌─────────────────┬─────────────────┬─────────────────┬─────────────────┬─────────────────┐
│                 │                 │                 │                 │                 │
│  KEY PARTNERS   │ KEY ACTIVITIES  │                 │   CUSTOMER      │                 │
│                 │                 │     VALUE       │  RELATIONSHIPS  │    CUSTOMER     │
│  Who helps us?  │ What do we do?  │  PROPOSITIONS   │                 │    SEGMENTS     │
│                 │                 │                 │  How do we      │                 │
│                 ├─────────────────┤  What value     │  interact?      │  Who do we      │
│                 │                 │  do we deliver? │                 │  serve?         │
│                 │ KEY RESOURCES   │                 ├─────────────────┤                 │
│                 │                 │                 │                 │                 │
│                 │ What do we need?│                 │    CHANNELS     │                 │
│                 │                 │                 │                 │                 │
│                 │                 │                 │  How do we      │                 │
│                 │                 │                 │  reach them?    │                 │
│                 │                 │                 │                 │                 │
├─────────────────┴─────────────────┴─────────────────┴─────────────────┴─────────────────┤
│                                           │                                             │
│              COST STRUCTURE               │              REVENUE STREAMS                │
│                                           │                                             │
│              What does it cost?           │              How do we earn?                │
│                                           │                                             │
└───────────────────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Building Block Details

1. Customer Segments

Who are you creating value for?

Segment Type Description Example
Mass Market No distinction between customers Consumer electronics
Niche Market Specialized, specific segments Luxury goods
Segmented Slightly different needs/problems Bank retail vs. wealth
Diversified Unrelated segments Amazon: retail + AWS
Multi-sided Interdependent segments Credit cards: merchants + users

Questions to answer:

  • Who are our most important customers?
  • What jobs are they trying to get done?
  • What pains and gains do they have?

2. Value Propositions

What value do you deliver to the customer?

Value Type Description
Newness Satisfying previously unmet needs
Performance Improving existing product/service
Customization Tailoring to specific needs
Getting it done Helping customers complete a job
Design Superior aesthetics or experience
Brand/Status Value from using a specific brand
Price Similar value at lower price
Cost Reduction Helping customers reduce costs
Risk Reduction Reducing risks customers face
Accessibility Available to those who lacked access
Convenience Making things easier to use

3. Channels

How do you reach and communicate with customers?

Channel Phases:

Awareness → Evaluation → Purchase → Delivery → After-sales
    │           │           │          │           │
    ▼           ▼           ▼          ▼           ▼
  Ads        Website      Store     Shipping    Support
  PR         Reviews      App       Install     Training
  Social     Demos        Sales     Access      Updates
Channel Type Examples
Direct Sales force, website, owned stores
Indirect Partner stores, wholesalers
Owned Physical stores, website, app
Partner Distributors, affiliates, marketplaces

4. Customer Relationships

What type of relationship does each segment expect?

Relationship Type Description
Personal assistance Human interaction during/after
Dedicated Specific rep for individual customer
Self-service No direct relationship
Automated Simulated personal via automation
Communities User communities and forums
Co-creation Customers help create value

5. Revenue Streams

How does each customer segment generate revenue?

Revenue Type Description Pricing
Asset sale Selling ownership rights Fixed/Dynamic
Usage fee Pay per use Per-unit
Subscription Continuous access Recurring
Lending/Renting Temporary access Time-based
Licensing Permission to use IP Per-license
Brokerage Intermediation fees Transaction %
Advertising Fees for advertising CPM/CPC/CPA

6. Key Resources

What assets are essential to deliver the value proposition?

Resource Type Examples
Physical Facilities, machines, vehicles, POS
Intellectual Brands, patents, data, proprietary tech
Human Expert staff, sales teams, engineers
Financial Cash, credit lines, stock options

7. Key Activities

What must you do to deliver the value proposition?

Activity Type Examples
Production Manufacturing, designing, delivering
Problem Solving Consulting, training, custom dev
Platform/Network Maintaining platform, matching supply/demand

8. Key Partners

Who are your key partners and suppliers?

Partnership Type Motivation
Strategic alliance Non-competitors working together
Coopetition Competitors partnering
Joint ventures New business development
Buyer-supplier Reliable supplies

Partnership motivations:

  • Optimization and economy of scale
  • Reduction of risk and uncertainty
  • Acquisition of resources and activities

9. Cost Structure

What are the most important costs?

Cost Type Description
Fixed costs Salaries, rent, utilities
Variable costs Materials, commissions, hosting
Economies of scale Cost advantages from volume
Economies of scope Cost advantages from variety
Model Type Focus
Cost-driven Minimize costs wherever possible
Value-driven Focus on value creation

Analysis Framework

Step 1: Define Customer Segments First

Start with who you serve:

Primary Segment:
├── Demographics: [Age, location, income]
├── Psychographics: [Values, interests, lifestyle]
├── Behaviors: [Usage patterns, buying habits]
└── Needs: [Jobs to be done, pains, gains]

Secondary Segments:
├── [Segment 2]
└── [Segment 3]

Step 2: Articulate Value Proposition

For each segment, define the value:

Value Proposition Canvas:

Customer Jobs          Product/Service
├── Functional         ├── Features
├── Social             ├── Benefits
└── Emotional          └── Experience
        ↓                    ↓
Customer Pains     →   Pain Relievers
        ↓                    ↓
Customer Gains     →   Gain Creators

Step 3: Map Channels and Relationships

How you reach and interact with customers:

Customer Journey:

Discover → Research → Buy → Use → Advocate
    │          │        │     │        │
    ▼          ▼        ▼     ▼        ▼
Channel:   SEO/Ads   Website  App   Email   Referral
Relation:  Automated  Self    Self  Auto    Community

Step 4: Define Infrastructure

What you need to deliver:

Value Delivery Infrastructure:

Key Partners          Key Activities         Key Resources
├── Suppliers         ├── Core operations    ├── Physical
├── Distributors      ├── Support            ├── Intellectual
└── Allies            └── Platform           ├── Human
                                             └── Financial

Step 5: Model Economics

Understand the financial viability:

Revenue Streams                 Cost Structure
├── [Stream 1]: $X/unit        ├── Fixed: $Y/month
├── [Stream 2]: $X/month       ├── Variable: $Z/unit
└── [Stream 3]: X% of GMV      └── CAC: $W/customer

Unit Economics:
├── LTV: $[amount]
├── CAC: $[amount]
├── LTV:CAC ratio: [X]:1
└── Payback period: [months]

Output Template

After completing analysis, document as:

## Business Model Canvas

**Company/Product:** [Name]

**Date:** [Date]

### Canvas Overview

| Block                  | Summary                  |
| ---------------------- | ------------------------ |
| Customer Segments      | [Key segments]           |
| Value Propositions     | [Core value delivered]   |
| Channels               | [Primary channels]       |
| Customer Relationships | [Relationship types]     |
| Revenue Streams        | [How you make money]     |
| Key Resources          | [Critical assets]        |
| Key Activities         | [Core operations]        |
| Key Partners           | [Strategic partnerships] |
| Cost Structure         | [Major cost drivers]     |

### Detailed Analysis

#### Customer Segments

[Detailed breakdown of segments, their needs, and characteristics]

#### Value Propositions

[Specific value delivered to each segment, pain relievers, gain creators]

#### Channels

[Channel strategy across customer journey phases]

#### Customer Relationships

[Relationship types per segment and their cost/value]

#### Revenue Streams

[Revenue model details, pricing strategy, unit economics]

#### Key Resources

[Critical resources and their strategic importance]

#### Key Activities

[Core activities that drive value creation]

#### Key Partners

[Partnership strategy and key relationships]

#### Cost Structure

[Cost drivers, fixed vs variable, economies of scale/scope]

### Strategic Assessment

**Strengths:**

- [Strength 1]
- [Strength 2]

**Weaknesses:**

- [Weakness 1]
- [Weakness 2]

**Opportunities:**

- [Opportunity 1]
- [Opportunity 2]

**Risks:**

- [Risk 1]
- [Risk 2]

### Recommendations

| Priority | Action   | Expected Impact |
| -------- | -------- | --------------- |
| High     | [Action] | [Impact]        |
| Medium   | [Action] | [Impact]        |

Real-World Examples

Netflix

Block Details
Segments Streaming viewers, content enthusiasts
Value Prop Unlimited on-demand content, originals, no ads
Channels App, smart TVs, website, partnerships
Relationships Automated personalization, self-service
Revenue Monthly subscription tiers
Resources Content library, recommendation AI, brand
Activities Content production, platform development
Partners Studios, device manufacturers, ISPs
Costs Content acquisition, tech infrastructure, marketing

Airbnb

Block Details
Segments Travelers (guests), property owners (hosts)
Value Prop Unique stays, extra income, trust platform
Channels Website, app, social, SEO
Relationships Community, reviews, support
Revenue Service fees (guest + host)
Resources Platform, brand, user data, trust system
Activities Matching, trust & safety, community
Partners Payment processors, insurance, photographers
Costs Platform development, trust & safety, marketing

Best Practices

Do

  • Start with customer - Everything flows from customer segments
  • Test assumptions - Each block contains hypotheses to validate
  • Iterate frequently - Update as you learn from the market
  • Check coherence - All blocks should connect logically
  • Quantify where possible - Add numbers to revenue and costs

Avoid

  • Inside-out thinking - Don't start with product features
  • Static canvas - It's a living document, not a one-time exercise
  • Ignoring competition - Understand competitor business models
  • Skipping validation - Assumptions need testing with real customers
  • Over-complicating - Keep it high-level and actionable

Integration with Other Methods

Method Combined Use
Jobs-to-be-Done Deep dive into value proposition
Five Whys Root cause analysis of model weaknesses
Lean Startup Build-measure-learn cycles for validation
Value Proposition Detailed value-customer fit analysis
Graph Thinking Map relationships between canvas elements

Resources

Weekly Installs
1
Repository
smithery/ai
First Seen
6 days ago
Installed on
amp1
opencode1
kimi-cli1
codex1
github-copilot1
gemini-cli1