TY - JOUR
T1 - The role of the business model in capturing value from innovation
T2 - Evidence from Xerox Corporation's technology spin-off companies
AU - Chesbrough, Henry
AU - Rosenbloom, Richard S.
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - This paper explores the role of the business model in capturing value from early stage technology. A successful business model creates a heuristic logic that connects technical potential with the realization of economic value. The business model unlocks latent value from a technology, but its logic constrains the subsequent search for new, alternative models for other technologies later on-an implicit cognitive dimension overlooked in most discourse on the topic. We explore the intellectual roots of the concept, offer a working definition and show how the Xerox Corporation arose by employing an effective business model to commercialize a technology rejected by other leading companies of the day. We then show the long shadow that this model cast upon Xerox's later management of selected spin-off companies from Xerox PARC. Xerox evaluated the technical potential of these spin-offs through its own business model, while those spin-offs that became successful did so through evolving business models that came to differ substantially from that of Xerox. The search and learning for an effective business model in failed ventures, by contrast, were quite limited.
AB - This paper explores the role of the business model in capturing value from early stage technology. A successful business model creates a heuristic logic that connects technical potential with the realization of economic value. The business model unlocks latent value from a technology, but its logic constrains the subsequent search for new, alternative models for other technologies later on-an implicit cognitive dimension overlooked in most discourse on the topic. We explore the intellectual roots of the concept, offer a working definition and show how the Xerox Corporation arose by employing an effective business model to commercialize a technology rejected by other leading companies of the day. We then show the long shadow that this model cast upon Xerox's later management of selected spin-off companies from Xerox PARC. Xerox evaluated the technical potential of these spin-offs through its own business model, while those spin-offs that became successful did so through evolving business models that came to differ substantially from that of Xerox. The search and learning for an effective business model in failed ventures, by contrast, were quite limited.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0036299320&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/icc/11.3.529
DO - 10.1093/icc/11.3.529
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0036299320
SN - 0960-6491
VL - 11
SP - 529
EP - 555
JO - Industrial and Corporate Change
JF - Industrial and Corporate Change
IS - 3
ER -