Essay Topic Hub

Business Model
Essays

1,397+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,397 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

A business model describes how an organization creates, delivers, and captures value — defining the relationship between a company, its customers, and the market it operates in. Business courses across management, strategy, entrepreneurship, and organizational development regularly ask students to examine business models because they sit at the intersection of planning, operations, and competitive positioning. The topic is academically interesting precisely because no single framework applies universally; models must account for the specific services a company provides, the customers it targets, and the broader market conditions it faces.

The papers archived on this topic approach business models from several distinct angles. Case-study analysis is common, with papers examining specific organizations — including Skype, Telstra, and Redbox — to evaluate how their models perform under real conditions. Other papers take a strategic lens, linking business model design to human resources, finance, and organizational change. Some focus on emerging technologies such as RFID and cloud computing to explore how innovation forces companies to rethink service delivery and management structures. Still others address sector-specific challenges, such as attracting and retaining teachers or assessing the productivity of teleworking arrangements.

A strong essay on this topic begins with a clearly scoped thesis that connects a company's model to a specific outcome — growth, failure, competitive advantage, or adaptation. Evidence drawn from operational data, market behavior, and organizational structure tends to carry the most weight. One common pitfall is treating a business model as a static snapshot; strong essays account for how models evolve in response to changing customer needs, market pressures, and internal management decisions.

1,397 papers
Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Ganong David Ganong Must Determine
David Ganong must determine a course for the future of his company. The industry environment is challenging. The company has a relatively strong financial position, but only has a few good markets and products with…
Paper Undergraduate
Ing, Rebel in the Banking
What is ING Direct's competitive strategy in the U.S.A. And how does this enable them to achieve superior financial performance?
Paper Doctorate
Case analysis of IKEA's business model and strategy
IKEA was founded in the 1940s as a home furnishings company and quickly expanded into its current form. The companies mission is to "offer home furnishing products of good function and design at prices much lower than…
Paper Doctorate
eBay business model and operations
The recent (or ongoing) recession has provided an excellent external opportunity for eBay, as the company has long offered many consumer products at discounted rates in addition to higher end auction items.
Paper Undergraduate
Starbucks Global Strategy: Environmental Factors Analysis
Starbucks is a dominant coffee chain in the United States and has taken their concept to 49 more countries. Canada is the largest base of foreign operations, with over 1000 stores, but Starbucks has a much higher market…
Research Paper Doctorate
Impact of technology and management on United Parcel Service operations
The purpose of this case study is to review the journal article from University of Maryland College Library's database entitled "Competing with it: The UPS Case" published in Volume 7 Number 2, Journal of American…
Paper Masters
Marketing strategy planning and organizational structure
Blockbuster has succeeded by being very agile and quick to respond from a marketing and services standpoint to very significant opportunities and threats in their core markets. Having changed their value chain three times in the case study and a myriad of modifications in each cycle of business model re-engineering, Blockbuster emerges as a multi-channel based entertainment provider. The three strategic cycles of their value chain parallel the industry lifecycles of the video rental marketplace, pay-per-view premium and finally online services comparable to direct delivery programs like Hulu and distribution-centric business models like Netflix. Blockbuster's aggressive retail expansion, retrenchment, introduction of games, online services and direct competition to Netflix all show how quickly the company can re-intent itself. Yet for all of these strengths, Blockbuster is still being disrupted by entertainment, gaming and entertainment services business models instead of being the disruptor. They have yet to break out of being continually in a revision mode related to their retailing operations. Their retail-based business model is slowing dying due to the high costs of operating locations, the rise of Netflix as a viable alternative for watching videos at home, and the disintermediation from Redbox, WalMart and other mass merchandisers offering lower-priced and broader selections of videos to watch. Blockbuster still faces a very serious strategic challenge, and that is overcoming the commoditization of the industry they are in, where price and availability have become the new differentiators.
Essay Doctorate
Southwest vs. Lufthansa Quality Management Creating Value
Creating value through quality management
Paper Masters
Industry Analysis Since the Passage
Since the passage of the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, the commercial air transportation industry has been going through a tremendous transformation. Where, the increased amounts of deregulation are helping…
Paper Masters
Ebay Case in 1995, Ebay
In this paper, we are going to be studying the challenges that are impacting EBay. This is accomplished by focusing on: the problems facing the firm and possible recommendations for adapting to them. Once this occurs, is when we can offer specific insights that will show how the company can deal with these challenges to improve competiveness.