Abstract

In e-business freemium business models have become legitimate. However, current research provides little insight on how the free and premium offering should be employed to lead to growth and success in the long run. The presented research aims to fill this gap by investigating how the property ‘free’ was employed in young entrepreneurial ventures’ business models in the initial life-cycle stages – opportunity recognition, market entry, and market exploitation. We find that various forms of freemium business models are employed through the initial life-cycle stages of a new venture for reasons of trial-and-error, learning, exploration, legitimization and resource acquisition. A freemium business model can also serve as a nascent business model, though without a sustainable monetization component, for finding a sustainable business model through a series of dynamic adjustments. With our findings we contribute to the business model literature in three ways: First, our empirical findings show the many-sidedness of the component ‘free’ in freemium business models. Free users are of importance for network building, exploration and exploitation and growth over time. Moreover, free users enable directly and indirectly further resource acquisition. Second, while previous literature has taken a static perspective, we contribute by illustrating the dynamic process of strategic business model design for growth. Finally, we introduce the concept of the nascent business model which is new to the literature.

Highlights

  • New businesses often start either from a market vision or from a technological capability

  • We considered a case study appropriate as a research method since little is known about the relationship between growth and specific business model design (Eisenhardt, 1989)

  • The results that we present in the following shed further light on the importance of their free offering, its development and its impact on growth

Read more

Summary

Introduction

New businesses often start either from a market vision or from a technological capability. The firm started merely with a new technology for Internet search that was free and proved wildly successful with users due to its extraordinary utility, but with no idea whatsoever of how to make money from that. The advertisers became Google’s paying customers and the main source of revenues, and Google users enjoying the free service turned out to be a part of Google’s value proposition (Kesting & Günzel-Jensen, 2015). This realization led eventually to a successful business model, which was not envisioned from the beginning (Baden-Fuller & Haefliger, 2013). After more than 15 years of existence, Google has become one of the most influential, profitable, and fastest growing companies in the world (Google Inc., 2013)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call