Ben Janssen, a former colleague who started his own consultancy on change and (open) education, a... more Ben Janssen, a former colleague who started his own consultancy on change and (open) education, and myself discussed several experiences we have with open educational resources and alike.
In this context he made an interesting remark, as Ben often does. In his view, Open Education is not only a public good, but can also be used as a communication channel. As he stated:
“in my work as an external consultant I often find that departments within an organization are working on the same projects, starting the same pilots and the same programs”.
Even over organizations he sees the same phenomena: organizations who work on the same projects without knowing what happens a stone throw away.
By determining the strategy of a not-for –profit organization (whether an NGO or an educational o... more By determining the strategy of a not-for –profit organization (whether an NGO or an educational organization) it is often not possible to determine a customer, an individual or group who pays for the service or product offered. Stakeholder analyzes can help to answer the question: For who are we doing what we do? What is our value-offering to whom?
In 1999 the global non-profit sector had a turnover of over $1 trillion with 19 million fully pai... more In 1999 the global non-profit sector had a turnover of over $1 trillion with 19 million fully paid employees. It was the equivalent of the eighth largest economy (Sustainability 2003). Despite this, it was poorly understood. In 2008 Lambell, Ramia, Nyland and Michelotti concluded that non-governmental organisations (NGO) are still relatively absent from the mainstream scholarly management and broader business studies literature. On the other hand, business models and business model canvas is a subject that has been discussed and much researched since the publication of Osterwalder’s dissertation in 2004.
The importance of the NGO sector and a desire to better understand their business models was the inspiration for this research - the creation of a tool useful for NGOs, academics and practitioners. Hence, the main objective is the development of a specialized business model canvas for NGOs. The central research question of this study is defined as ‘how is a NGO business model canvas structured?’
A business model canvas for NGOs was conceptualised utilising Osterwalder and Pigneur’s (2010) third party funded model as the foundation. The building blocks and definitions were initially based on literature review sources (business, social business and NGO management literature). Following interview responses and analysis of annual reports of NGOs both the building blocks and definitions were adapted to align better to NGO terminology. These are presented below.
This conceptual business model canvas for NGOs was tested through interviews with four NGO experts and leaders of two Foundations and five International NGOs (INGO) using the case study method. This testing led to the development of two separate business model canvases. The canvas for Foundations is a slight adaption from Osterwalder and Pigneur’s third party funding business model (2010). The other canvas is applicable for INGOs with multiple streams of income. This is made up of two sections, one for programmatic and the other for fundraising/ marketing and financing activities. This division is the result of a desire to maintain clarity and hence the usability of the business model canvas as a tool for communications, visualization of business models and analysis. The interviewees confirmed the practical relevance and utility of the business model canvas. In addition, it has academic relevance due to the business model canvas’s specific usage for NGOs. This provides a basis for further research, such as, comparative analysis and historical analysis of NGO business models and so forth.
Open Learning: The Journal of Open, Distance and e-Learning , Dec 2013
According to Christensen and Horn, Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are serving non-consumers.... more According to Christensen and Horn, Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are serving non-consumers. Although they are limited in the services they provide compared with traditional colleges, they offer free and accessible education to a broader audience, who cannot afford the traditional provision. However, this is a characteristic of online distance learning in its broadest sense, as can be read in the reports of UNESCO. For MOOCs to be disruptive, they have to: open up markets by competing with the existing firms using low-cost business models; improve beyond the level of the original competitors, taking price differences into account; and improve quality and replace the established firms. In this article, we are going to look at whether MOOCs are really disruptive innovations, or educational innovations that disturb the present state without driving out old educational business models. Based on the three characteristics of Christensen and Horn, our conclusion will be that the latter is the case. This does not mean that traditional education can ignore MOOCs, open educational resources and other forms of online distance learning, but that it will not be a direct competitor for degree-searching students.
The purpose of the article is to determine which factors are most important for the success of a ... more The purpose of the article is to determine which factors are most important for the success of a startup with a radical innovation in the first three years. First a conceptual model is designed in which three main factors determine the success of growth: the uniqueness of the advantages of the innovation, the startup organization characteristics and the person of the entrepreneur. A survey was setup with startup companies which are not older than fifteen years and which are active in a diversity of segments. A correlation analyses was done based on 75 respondents.Growth was operationalised in two ways: the growth in turnover and the growth in employment. We found different factors correlating in a different way with the different growth concepts. Both growth in employment and in turnover are positively related to a thorough business plan and more than 75k Euro seed capital. The uniqueness of the advantages of the innovation, customer pro-activeness, multiple founders and a relevant social network have a positive influence on turnover growth but not on employment growth. For turnover growth t he uniqueness of the advantages of the innovation and more than 75k Euro initial capital had a high significance. There is a positive relation between employment growth and external advice and investor capital but not with the turnover growth. Only a thorough business plan, external advice, 75k Euro initial capital and using investors capital had a positive significant influence on employment growth. Other conclusions are that depending on the used criterion for growth the significant factors differ and that in general the employment growth is a factor 4 smaller than the turnover growth.
Sustainability is a key requirement for the OER business model. Education in the 21st century has... more Sustainability is a key requirement for the OER business model. Education in the 21st century has the character of life long education, so the question is not so much whether a specific OER project can be funded adequately but whether we can create an underlying business model foundation able to serve as a flight deck from which necessary OER based learning activities can be launched, as part of completely open educational offerings or embedded in hybrid educational constellations, across organizations and countries.
After sketching the scene in the introduction we move to paragraph 2 where we describe how the application of the OER paradigm radically changes not only learning itself but from a business perspective also the interactions and relationships between learners, “teachers”, creators and users of educational resources as well as relations between educational institutions, designers and service providers of both formal and non-formal learning offerings. In paragraph 3 we draw conclusions from these changing relationships, which leads to a new perspective on sustainable business models for, OER based, (open) education. Next in paragraph 4 we describe our ideas on the essential components of the proposed business model to become a viable sustainable living reality. Based on heuristics from research on learning networks, open innovation and collaboration we describe methods to frame OER/OpenED activities to lay the groundwork for sustainable learning ecologies. We end with concluding remarks and suggestions for future work.
The economic proverb ‘There is no such thing such as a free lunch’ applies also to open education... more The economic proverb ‘There is no such thing such as a free lunch’ applies also to open educational resources (OER). In recent years, several authors have used revenue models and business models to analyse the different sources of possible funding for OER. In this article the business models of Osterwalder and Chesbrough are combined with research on the motives of the participants of OER to analyse possible funding models. If the motives of governments (knowledge economy), educational institutions (efficiency, marketing), individual producers (reputation, academic interests) and users (intermediary educational products, learning) are combined, it is shown that the only long-term sustainable independent business model is based on subsidies. However, this conclusion depends both on the definition of openness (in the sense of at no cost) and on motives. More research on both aspects could alter these conclusions.
Open Learning: The Journal of Open and Distance Learning, 2011
The economic proverb 'There is no such thing such as a free lunch'applies also to open ... more The economic proverb 'There is no such thing such as a free lunch'applies also to open educational resources (OER). In recent years, several authors have used revenue models and business models to analyse the different sources of possible funding for OER. In this ...
Ben Janssen, a former colleague who started his own consultancy on change and (open) education, a... more Ben Janssen, a former colleague who started his own consultancy on change and (open) education, and myself discussed several experiences we have with open educational resources and alike.
In this context he made an interesting remark, as Ben often does. In his view, Open Education is not only a public good, but can also be used as a communication channel. As he stated:
“in my work as an external consultant I often find that departments within an organization are working on the same projects, starting the same pilots and the same programs”.
Even over organizations he sees the same phenomena: organizations who work on the same projects without knowing what happens a stone throw away.
By determining the strategy of a not-for –profit organization (whether an NGO or an educational o... more By determining the strategy of a not-for –profit organization (whether an NGO or an educational organization) it is often not possible to determine a customer, an individual or group who pays for the service or product offered. Stakeholder analyzes can help to answer the question: For who are we doing what we do? What is our value-offering to whom?
In 1999 the global non-profit sector had a turnover of over $1 trillion with 19 million fully pai... more In 1999 the global non-profit sector had a turnover of over $1 trillion with 19 million fully paid employees. It was the equivalent of the eighth largest economy (Sustainability 2003). Despite this, it was poorly understood. In 2008 Lambell, Ramia, Nyland and Michelotti concluded that non-governmental organisations (NGO) are still relatively absent from the mainstream scholarly management and broader business studies literature. On the other hand, business models and business model canvas is a subject that has been discussed and much researched since the publication of Osterwalder’s dissertation in 2004.
The importance of the NGO sector and a desire to better understand their business models was the inspiration for this research - the creation of a tool useful for NGOs, academics and practitioners. Hence, the main objective is the development of a specialized business model canvas for NGOs. The central research question of this study is defined as ‘how is a NGO business model canvas structured?’
A business model canvas for NGOs was conceptualised utilising Osterwalder and Pigneur’s (2010) third party funded model as the foundation. The building blocks and definitions were initially based on literature review sources (business, social business and NGO management literature). Following interview responses and analysis of annual reports of NGOs both the building blocks and definitions were adapted to align better to NGO terminology. These are presented below.
This conceptual business model canvas for NGOs was tested through interviews with four NGO experts and leaders of two Foundations and five International NGOs (INGO) using the case study method. This testing led to the development of two separate business model canvases. The canvas for Foundations is a slight adaption from Osterwalder and Pigneur’s third party funding business model (2010). The other canvas is applicable for INGOs with multiple streams of income. This is made up of two sections, one for programmatic and the other for fundraising/ marketing and financing activities. This division is the result of a desire to maintain clarity and hence the usability of the business model canvas as a tool for communications, visualization of business models and analysis. The interviewees confirmed the practical relevance and utility of the business model canvas. In addition, it has academic relevance due to the business model canvas’s specific usage for NGOs. This provides a basis for further research, such as, comparative analysis and historical analysis of NGO business models and so forth.
Open Learning: The Journal of Open, Distance and e-Learning , Dec 2013
According to Christensen and Horn, Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are serving non-consumers.... more According to Christensen and Horn, Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) are serving non-consumers. Although they are limited in the services they provide compared with traditional colleges, they offer free and accessible education to a broader audience, who cannot afford the traditional provision. However, this is a characteristic of online distance learning in its broadest sense, as can be read in the reports of UNESCO. For MOOCs to be disruptive, they have to: open up markets by competing with the existing firms using low-cost business models; improve beyond the level of the original competitors, taking price differences into account; and improve quality and replace the established firms. In this article, we are going to look at whether MOOCs are really disruptive innovations, or educational innovations that disturb the present state without driving out old educational business models. Based on the three characteristics of Christensen and Horn, our conclusion will be that the latter is the case. This does not mean that traditional education can ignore MOOCs, open educational resources and other forms of online distance learning, but that it will not be a direct competitor for degree-searching students.
The purpose of the article is to determine which factors are most important for the success of a ... more The purpose of the article is to determine which factors are most important for the success of a startup with a radical innovation in the first three years. First a conceptual model is designed in which three main factors determine the success of growth: the uniqueness of the advantages of the innovation, the startup organization characteristics and the person of the entrepreneur. A survey was setup with startup companies which are not older than fifteen years and which are active in a diversity of segments. A correlation analyses was done based on 75 respondents.Growth was operationalised in two ways: the growth in turnover and the growth in employment. We found different factors correlating in a different way with the different growth concepts. Both growth in employment and in turnover are positively related to a thorough business plan and more than 75k Euro seed capital. The uniqueness of the advantages of the innovation, customer pro-activeness, multiple founders and a relevant social network have a positive influence on turnover growth but not on employment growth. For turnover growth t he uniqueness of the advantages of the innovation and more than 75k Euro initial capital had a high significance. There is a positive relation between employment growth and external advice and investor capital but not with the turnover growth. Only a thorough business plan, external advice, 75k Euro initial capital and using investors capital had a positive significant influence on employment growth. Other conclusions are that depending on the used criterion for growth the significant factors differ and that in general the employment growth is a factor 4 smaller than the turnover growth.
Sustainability is a key requirement for the OER business model. Education in the 21st century has... more Sustainability is a key requirement for the OER business model. Education in the 21st century has the character of life long education, so the question is not so much whether a specific OER project can be funded adequately but whether we can create an underlying business model foundation able to serve as a flight deck from which necessary OER based learning activities can be launched, as part of completely open educational offerings or embedded in hybrid educational constellations, across organizations and countries.
After sketching the scene in the introduction we move to paragraph 2 where we describe how the application of the OER paradigm radically changes not only learning itself but from a business perspective also the interactions and relationships between learners, “teachers”, creators and users of educational resources as well as relations between educational institutions, designers and service providers of both formal and non-formal learning offerings. In paragraph 3 we draw conclusions from these changing relationships, which leads to a new perspective on sustainable business models for, OER based, (open) education. Next in paragraph 4 we describe our ideas on the essential components of the proposed business model to become a viable sustainable living reality. Based on heuristics from research on learning networks, open innovation and collaboration we describe methods to frame OER/OpenED activities to lay the groundwork for sustainable learning ecologies. We end with concluding remarks and suggestions for future work.
The economic proverb ‘There is no such thing such as a free lunch’ applies also to open education... more The economic proverb ‘There is no such thing such as a free lunch’ applies also to open educational resources (OER). In recent years, several authors have used revenue models and business models to analyse the different sources of possible funding for OER. In this article the business models of Osterwalder and Chesbrough are combined with research on the motives of the participants of OER to analyse possible funding models. If the motives of governments (knowledge economy), educational institutions (efficiency, marketing), individual producers (reputation, academic interests) and users (intermediary educational products, learning) are combined, it is shown that the only long-term sustainable independent business model is based on subsidies. However, this conclusion depends both on the definition of openness (in the sense of at no cost) and on motives. More research on both aspects could alter these conclusions.
Open Learning: The Journal of Open and Distance Learning, 2011
The economic proverb 'There is no such thing such as a free lunch'applies also to open ... more The economic proverb 'There is no such thing such as a free lunch'applies also to open educational resources (OER). In recent years, several authors have used revenue models and business models to analyse the different sources of possible funding for OER. In this ...
Concluding, there seem some common requirements for the success of networks in different constell... more Concluding, there seem some common requirements for the success of networks in different constellations. Most studies stress the importance of alignment in the strategy/goals of participants, of fairness as the distribution over the supply chain can change and –in some cases- leadership within the network.
The emergence of an OER-value network should take into account that the different participants should be “seduced” to participate. In this sense the OER-organization should take the lead, whereas towards other participants (other institutions or the government) taking the lead would be counter-productive. A conceptual model should be developed, based on the conclusions of the value network models in other sectors and industries, to analyze the existing OER-organizations before more definitive conclusions can be drawn.
Open Educational resources; What is a business model; Application of the business canvas; Why par... more Open Educational resources; What is a business model; Application of the business canvas; Why participate: Hylen (2009) –motives; Value Networks
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Papers by Frank De Langen
In this context he made an interesting remark, as Ben often does. In his view, Open Education is not only a public good, but can also be used as a communication channel. As he stated:
“in my work as an external consultant I often find that departments within an organization are working on the same projects, starting the same pilots and the same programs”.
Even over organizations he sees the same phenomena: organizations who work on the same projects without knowing what happens a stone throw away.
https://frankounl.wordpress.com/2015/03/29/open-education-efficiency-collaboration-and-management/
Full text see: https://frankounl.wordpress.com/2015/03/11/a-business-model-for-a-research-and-education/
The importance of the NGO sector and a desire to better understand their business models was the inspiration for this research - the creation of a tool useful for NGOs, academics and practitioners. Hence, the main objective is the development of a specialized business model canvas for NGOs. The central research question of this study is defined as ‘how is a NGO business model canvas structured?’
A business model canvas for NGOs was conceptualised utilising Osterwalder and Pigneur’s (2010) third party funded model as the foundation. The building blocks and definitions were initially based on literature review sources (business, social business and NGO management literature). Following interview responses and analysis of annual reports of NGOs both the building blocks and definitions were adapted to align better to NGO terminology. These are presented below.
This conceptual business model canvas for NGOs was tested through interviews with four NGO experts and leaders of two Foundations and five International NGOs (INGO) using the case study method. This testing led to the development of two separate business model canvases. The canvas for Foundations is a slight adaption from Osterwalder and Pigneur’s third party funding business model (2010). The other canvas is applicable for INGOs with multiple streams of income. This is made up of two sections, one for programmatic and the other for fundraising/ marketing and financing activities. This division is the result of a desire to maintain clarity and hence the usability of the business model canvas as a tool for communications, visualization of business models and analysis. The interviewees confirmed the practical relevance and utility of the business model canvas. In addition, it has academic relevance due to the business model canvas’s specific usage for NGOs. This provides a basis for further research, such as, comparative analysis and historical analysis of NGO business models and so forth.
different factors correlating in a different way with the different growth concepts. Both growth in employment and in turnover are positively related to a thorough business plan and more than 75k Euro seed capital. The
uniqueness of the advantages of the innovation, customer pro-activeness, multiple founders and a relevant social network have a positive influence on turnover growth but not on employment growth. For turnover growth t he uniqueness of the advantages of the innovation and more than 75k Euro initial capital had a high significance. There is a positive relation between employment growth and external advice and investor capital but not with the
turnover growth. Only a thorough business plan, external advice, 75k Euro initial capital and using investors capital had a positive significant influence on employment growth. Other conclusions are that depending on the used criterion for growth the significant factors differ and that in general the employment growth is a factor 4 smaller than the turnover growth.
After sketching the scene in the introduction we move to paragraph 2 where we describe how the application of the OER paradigm radically changes not only learning itself but from a business perspective also the interactions and relationships between learners, “teachers”, creators and users of educational resources as well as relations between educational institutions, designers and service providers of both formal and non-formal learning offerings. In paragraph 3 we draw conclusions from these changing relationships, which leads to a new perspective on sustainable business models for, OER based, (open) education. Next in paragraph 4 we describe our ideas on the essential components of the proposed business model to become a viable sustainable living reality. Based on heuristics from research on learning networks, open innovation and collaboration we describe methods to frame OER/OpenED activities to lay the groundwork for sustainable learning ecologies. We end with concluding remarks and suggestions for future work.
In this context he made an interesting remark, as Ben often does. In his view, Open Education is not only a public good, but can also be used as a communication channel. As he stated:
“in my work as an external consultant I often find that departments within an organization are working on the same projects, starting the same pilots and the same programs”.
Even over organizations he sees the same phenomena: organizations who work on the same projects without knowing what happens a stone throw away.
https://frankounl.wordpress.com/2015/03/29/open-education-efficiency-collaboration-and-management/
Full text see: https://frankounl.wordpress.com/2015/03/11/a-business-model-for-a-research-and-education/
The importance of the NGO sector and a desire to better understand their business models was the inspiration for this research - the creation of a tool useful for NGOs, academics and practitioners. Hence, the main objective is the development of a specialized business model canvas for NGOs. The central research question of this study is defined as ‘how is a NGO business model canvas structured?’
A business model canvas for NGOs was conceptualised utilising Osterwalder and Pigneur’s (2010) third party funded model as the foundation. The building blocks and definitions were initially based on literature review sources (business, social business and NGO management literature). Following interview responses and analysis of annual reports of NGOs both the building blocks and definitions were adapted to align better to NGO terminology. These are presented below.
This conceptual business model canvas for NGOs was tested through interviews with four NGO experts and leaders of two Foundations and five International NGOs (INGO) using the case study method. This testing led to the development of two separate business model canvases. The canvas for Foundations is a slight adaption from Osterwalder and Pigneur’s third party funding business model (2010). The other canvas is applicable for INGOs with multiple streams of income. This is made up of two sections, one for programmatic and the other for fundraising/ marketing and financing activities. This division is the result of a desire to maintain clarity and hence the usability of the business model canvas as a tool for communications, visualization of business models and analysis. The interviewees confirmed the practical relevance and utility of the business model canvas. In addition, it has academic relevance due to the business model canvas’s specific usage for NGOs. This provides a basis for further research, such as, comparative analysis and historical analysis of NGO business models and so forth.
different factors correlating in a different way with the different growth concepts. Both growth in employment and in turnover are positively related to a thorough business plan and more than 75k Euro seed capital. The
uniqueness of the advantages of the innovation, customer pro-activeness, multiple founders and a relevant social network have a positive influence on turnover growth but not on employment growth. For turnover growth t he uniqueness of the advantages of the innovation and more than 75k Euro initial capital had a high significance. There is a positive relation between employment growth and external advice and investor capital but not with the
turnover growth. Only a thorough business plan, external advice, 75k Euro initial capital and using investors capital had a positive significant influence on employment growth. Other conclusions are that depending on the used criterion for growth the significant factors differ and that in general the employment growth is a factor 4 smaller than the turnover growth.
After sketching the scene in the introduction we move to paragraph 2 where we describe how the application of the OER paradigm radically changes not only learning itself but from a business perspective also the interactions and relationships between learners, “teachers”, creators and users of educational resources as well as relations between educational institutions, designers and service providers of both formal and non-formal learning offerings. In paragraph 3 we draw conclusions from these changing relationships, which leads to a new perspective on sustainable business models for, OER based, (open) education. Next in paragraph 4 we describe our ideas on the essential components of the proposed business model to become a viable sustainable living reality. Based on heuristics from research on learning networks, open innovation and collaboration we describe methods to frame OER/OpenED activities to lay the groundwork for sustainable learning ecologies. We end with concluding remarks and suggestions for future work.
The emergence of an OER-value network should take into account that the different participants should be “seduced” to participate. In this sense the OER-organization should take the lead, whereas towards other participants (other institutions or the government) taking the lead would be counter-productive. A conceptual model should be developed, based on the conclusions of the value network models in other sectors and industries, to analyze the existing OER-organizations before more definitive conclusions can be drawn.