Wrapping up Customer Segments (the Who of your Healthcare Business Model) (8 of 8)
As we close out our final post in this 1st miniseries, we are taking a stroll down memory lane on modelH business model canvas and a victory lap as we complete the “Who” or Customer segment part of our revisit. We have two objectives today:?
What is modelH again?
What is a business model canvas? Wikipedia defines it as “a strategic management template for developing new or documenting existing business models.” It is not a business plan but a visual language designed to align business activities that produce value by illustrating potential trade-offs. Alexander Osterwalder initially proposed the nine "building blocks" of the business model design template that came to be called the Business Model Canvas in 2005, based on his PhD work on business model ontology, which Yves Pigneur supervised.
I fell in love with it back then and still have my original copy. As I was in the healthcare business, overseeing start-ups as the Chief Innovation Officer at a $12B health insurance company and creating a new company for them (GuideWell Health), it was a fantastic strategic framing tool for my teams and me to use in our work.?
However, after experimentation with it, I found it could have been more useful than it was, given the multi-sided nature of the healthcare and life sciences industry.
What is the problem we are trying to solve?
In 2013, I funded an experiment to create a business model canvas to generate and evaluate healthcare business models that can create positive consumption experiences, improve care delivery, and align and control costs (The Triple Aim).? We then want to use our framework to co-create and test innovative healthcare business models.?
I worked with some fantastic and like-minded people around the globe (about 300 of us) to initiate the modelH CoCreation Forum. We began by agreeing on what defines value within the healthcare ecosystem. Our definition of value is based on Michael Porter’s work in What is Value in Health Care? – “the patient health outcome achieved per healthcare dollar spent.”? Therefore, a value-based healthcare business model must result in:
What was the Outcome?
Our healthcare business model canvas, modelH, is designed to work in a market-driven system.? Better ideas can then be generated and evaluated using that engine because they 1) create shared value and 2) can succeed in the marketplace.?
We evaluated the core Building Blocks of Osterwalder’s model and debated their nuances regarding healthcare and life science business models.?
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We also looked at and debated several new Building Blocks needed for healthcare and how they might be incorporated into the canvas. The additions we discussed are:
Some of these we kept, some we dropped, some we combined, and some we split out (like Customer Segment). The final result we agreed upon (right or wrong) is as follows:
The image below shows that these 17 blocks can be divided into four main functional areas.?
For our revisit, we began with the WHO section (the most important part). We also discussed the JTBD in detail, as it bridges the Who and the What of any business model. Let's review what we learned in each of the seven posts.?
What is Next?
Well, first, I am going fishing. This is the time of year I head to Alaska with my son to go fly fishing for wild salmon. But when I get back, we will pick up with the “What” part of the modelH canvas and go into detail on Value Propositions, Experience, Channels, and Customer Relationships. We will also revisit the notion of JTBD in healthcare.?
Interested in what I am doing and want to learn more? You can read all about modelH business model innovation for healthcare on Medium.?
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to your health,
- Kevin