The times they are a-changin’…
And so you have learned about new business models.
Now, be ready for the next 10 disruptive waves.
10 Markets
10 Business Models
50 Examples
100+ Slides
Disruptive Education Model
Disruptive Banking Model
Disruptive Technology Model
Disruptive Media Model
Disruptive Cable & Telco Model
Disruptive Medical Model
Disruptive Travel Model
Disruptive Government Model
Disruptive Consumer Goods Model
Disruptive Retail Model
Produced by Thaesis
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10 Disruptive Business Models
1. uptive
disru
>100k SlideShare views
The times they are a-changin’…
And so you have learned about new business models.
Now, be ready for the next 10 disruptive waves.
3. Produced by
Thaesis supports the executive management, shareholders and potential
acquirers of organizations in designing and realising winning strategies that
lead to sustainable business results. The activities of Thaesis can be divided
into three areas: strategy, transitions and research. Our 100+ client portfolio
includes ABN AMRO, BBC, Bruna, Cyrte, De Persgroep, HP, IDTV, ING,
LexisNexis, Metro, Rabobank, Reed Elsevier, VNU Media and WPG.
• Independent strategy firm
• Located in Hilversum, the Netherlands
• Discovery of business logic
• Acceleration of new business
• Focus on rapidly changing markets
• Business development
• Growth strategies
• Management of transitions
• Strategic due diligence
• Post-merger acceleration strategies
The
boardroom
acceleration
company
Partners at Thaesis
Company established in 2006
4. Supported by
trendwatching.com is an independent and opinionated trend
firm, scanning the globe for the most promising consumer
trends, insights and related hands-on business ideas. For the
latest and greatest, trendwatching.com relies on their world-
wide network of hundreds of spotters in more than 120
countries.
Their paid services include a Premium Service including a
Trend Database, 15 Industry Trend Reports and the 2013 Trend
Report, speaking engagements, and Global Consumer Trend
Seminars in 13 cities in 11 countries.
Established in 2002, trendwatching.com coordinates a world-
wide network of analysts and spotters from its London office.
trendwatching.com BV is incorporated in the Netherlands. Its
sister-site is Springwise New Business Ideas.
Their trend findings help marketers, CEOs, researchers, and
anyone else interested in the future of business and consu-
merism, to dream up new goods, services and experiences for
(or even better, with) their customers.
Many of these findings are aggregated in a free monthly
Trend Briefing, which is sent in 9 languages (English, Chinese,
Korean, Dutch, German, French, Spanish, Turkish and Portu-
guese) to 160,000+ business professionals in more than 180
countries.
5. Disruptive Education Model * Disruptive Banking Model * Disruptive Technology Model * Disruptive
Media Model * Disruptive Cable & Telco Model * Disruptive Medical Model * Disruptive Travel Model *
Disruptive Government Model * Disruptive Consumer Goods Model * Disruptive Retail Model
Disruptive Education Model * Disruptive Banking Model * Disruptive Technology Model * Disruptive
Media Model * Disruptive Cable & Telco Model * Disruptive Medical Model * Disruptive Travel Model *
Disruptive Government Model * Disruptive Consumer Goods Model * Disruptive Retail Model
Disruptive Education Model * Disruptive Banking Model * Disruptive Technology Model * Disruptive
Disruptive
Disruptive Education Model * Disruptive Banking Model * Disruptive Technology Model * Disruptive
Media Model * Disruptive Cable & Telco Model * Disruptive Medical Model * Disruptive Travel Model *
Disruptive Government Model * Disruptive Consumer Goods Model * Disruptive Retail Model
Disruptive
Business
Models10
10. Public sector
Staff
Subsidies
Education
Materials design
Local
communities
Skills and
abilities
Local
customers
Disruptive Education Model
most relevant for both large educational institutions and educational publishers
Designed by Thaesis, 2013
Global
customers
= traditional components
= disruptive components
Courses, guides,
lectures, classes,
tutors and tools
Learning
intelligence
Methodologies
Knowledge,
degrees and
certifcates
FeesSalaries
Materials
Buildings
Licenses
Accreditation
Reputation
Brand
Media
technology
Subscriptions
Licenses
Online and
mobile learning
platforms
Media
technology
companies
Status stories
Communities
On-demand
educational
services
Video courses
Infographics
Games
Content
management
Social networks
Advertisements
Fairs
11. Large established economies in Europe and the United States increasingly depend on creativity and knowledge to
compete with emerging economies in South-America, Asia and Africa. Luckily, creativity thrives in challenging market
conditions. Acquiring knowledge and skills however, requires a high quality educational culture, learning intelligence and
significant time investments from participants. By adding on-demand, adaptive and personalized educational products
and services to their value proposition, large educational institutions and educational publishers offer both younger and
older generations opportunities to learn new knowledge and skills in their own time and tempo. By sharing status stories
in communities, users are the driving force behind quality transparency and ongoing improvement of education. The
necessity to embrace feedback and to be present in online and mobile channels has never been more clear. In time,
pupils, students and professionals expect educational institutions and educational publishers to offer instant gratification,
to be always available, to grant unlimited access, to offer infinite choice and a personal learning and testing environment.
Differences between educational institutions and educational publishers will
fade as both move towards becoming educational service providers.
In an increasingly digital classroom and library, video content and interactive infographics will be king. Online and mobile
classrooms connect pupils, students and professionals, spread information cheaply and easily, accelerate communication
and put stakeholders and participants in control. Educational publishers that are serious about riding this wave of
disruption will not want to miss out on these. They will create collections of full video courses, which are enriched with
lecture transcripts, handouts, reading assignments, tests and problem sets. They will also develop, co-create and share
infographics and games that allow for interaction and deep user engagement. The ubiquity of reviews means that savvy
audiences can see, hear and discuss every educational institution, teacher, tutoring service, textbook and educational
game that is available in the global marketplace. Educational institutions that lead the online conversation rather than
respond to it, will thrive as customers feel more comfortable in the quality of the educational products and services
provided.
Disruptive
Education
Model
21. National
governments
Financial
resources
Operating
revenues
Financial
management
Community
management
Local
communities
Insurances and
retirement
services
Businesses
Disruptive Banking Model
most relevant for both banks and insurance companies
Designed by Thaesis, 2013
Communities
= traditional components
= disruptive components
Offices and
agents
Trans-
parency
Banking and
investments
Information
and media
technology
Salaries
Secure
infrastructure
and platforms
Operating
costs
Online and
mobile
channels
Advisory
services
Reliability and
reputation
Technology
management
Relational
activities
Consumers
Community
costs /
revenues
Public
stakeholder
management
Social networks
Supranational
institutions
Community
and educational
activities
Community
facilitation
services
Financial
profits
22. Since the subprime mortgage crisis that originated in the United States of America and led to the financial crisis,
businesses and consumers are asking financial institutions to become more humane and empathic instead of self-
interested and lacking in compassion. Banks and insurance companies need to add community facilitation services to
their core value propositions in response. By doing so, business and consumers will reestablish relationships with
traditional financial institutions. If established banks and insurance companies are not successful in reestablishing these
relationships, national governments and supranational institutions are more likely to allow new entrants from technology
and services industries. Because online and mobile channels are fastly becoming dominant, offices and agents become
more and more obsolete instead of a valuable resource for high switching costs.
Businesses and consumers want banks and insurance companies to facilitate
them in local communities. Customers need to feel in control, know the facts and
receive 24/7-advise via online and mobile channels. Transparency is reliability.
Businesses and consumers in local communities place a high value on choice and freedom and want to be responsible for
all aspects of their own activities. However as financial products and services become more complex, many find it
increasingly difficult to make the right choices. This means that customers are interested and willing to learn about how
to best manage their finances. In addition, financial institutions can’t go wrong focusing on innovations that save
consumers’ time and make their day-to-day lives simpler and easier. In mature markets, contactless technologies such as
NFC (Near Field Communication) enable smartphones to store payment details that, in turn, allow users to pay instantly
for smaller transactions. In developing countries, where mobile penetration is high yet banking infrastructure is poor,
consumers heavily rely on these innovations for every day transactions. Driven by lower costs, increased trust and
transparency, and the desire for a new approach, businesses and consumers are increasingly turning to, and dealing with,
other businesses and consumers. They are asking banks and insurance companies to facilitate them in doing so.
Disruptive
Banking
Model
32. Universities
Developers
Device sales
Research &
Development
Marketing
Production
factories
Apps
Local
customers
Disruptive Technology Model
most relevant for electronics and technology companies
Designed by Thaesis, 2013
Global
customers
= traditional components
= disruptive components
Distributors
(Online) retail
Resellers
Patents
Touch screens
Wireless sound
systems
App salesSalaries
Production,
marketing and
legal costs
Knowledge of
technological
advancements
Behavioral
research
Service fees
User
communities
Semi-
automated
service contact
Co-creation
Account
management
Smartphones
Tablets
Laptops
Service delivery
Technology
research
Online
customers
Online media
Responsive
service
propositions
Knowledge of
behavioral
patterns
33. The pace of new technological advancements is increasingly high and the interaction between humans and technology
ever more intuitive. Technology and electronics are more and more able to wirelessly respond to natural gestures,
emotions and speech. Consumers and professionals alike are surrounded by smart electronics that become more
intelligent with each iteration. The impact is as diverse as immersive entertainment, empathic advertisement models, pro-
active search functionality, automated big data analysis and real-time decision support. Electronics and technology
companies are moving their core away from offering hardware ownership towards responsive and flexible service
propositions. The only growth markets in hardware are smartphones, tablets, laptops, smart and flexible touch screens
and wireless sound systems. Software has left the shelf indefinitely and the lab has become an open space for online
research and development. What used to be business-to-consumer companies have become fully dedicated to the
business-to-business markets and the other way around.
Electronics and technology companies are moving their core away from offering
hardware ownership towards responsive and flexible service propositions.
Apps are disrupting corporate software suits just like they have done in the consumer software markets. The biggest
challenge remains to deliver sustainable value with a competitive pricing model. Subscriptions are on the rise, large
advance investments in technology and electronics are in decline. Why is this happening? Technology and culture are not
separated from each other. Consumers and professionals are dealing with big changes in their environments and adopt
new behaviour accordingly. Previously stable notions about fixed prices and limited availability are shattered by their new
behavioral patterns. Consumers and professionals continue to be on the look-out for more service-oriented business
models and have gained experience in the application of new technologies. Cloud-based solutions are vastly replacing
local infrastructure, hardware and software. Devices become smaller and service delivery becomes as personalized as
end-users demand or allow. Winning technology delivers physically, mentally and emotionally engaging experiences
without harming the privacy of individuals and allow them to decide which role organizations play in their lives.
Disruptive
Technology
Model
41. MEDIA&
ENTERTAINMENT
F-FACTOR!
ON!
TWINSUMERS!
CURATED CONSUMPTION! CHOICE CUTS!
TRANSPERIENCES!
SOCIAL-LITE!
(UN)REAL!
CROWD-EXPRESS!
POPUPPING!
SELLSUMERS!
PRICE
PANDEMONIUM!
LIVING THE LIVE!
GAME ON!
FREE LOVE! OWNER-LESS!
TRIBEFACTURING!
VISUALOVE!
REWARD INC.!
POINT & KNOW!
BRAND
BUTLERS!
TRANSPARENCY
TRIUMPH!
BEST OF THE REST
MEDIA &
ENTERTAINMENT
EXAMPLES!
43. Marketing and
sales
Creatives
Intellectual
property
Format
subscriptions
Interaction
design
Media
production
Local
communities
Online and
mobile content
Local
customers
Disruptive Media Model
most relevant for media and entertainment companies
Designed by Thaesis, 2013
Global
customers
= traditional components
= disruptive components
Distributors
Production
ethics
Print and
broadcast
content
AdvertisementsSalaries
Production,
marketing and
distribution
Media brand
and reputation
Ecosystem
infrastructure
Ecosystem
subscriptions
Smart phones
Tablets
Media
technology
companies
Shared status
stories
On-demand /
location-based
content
Ecosystem
development
Social networks
Subscriptions
Online and
mobile
ecosystems
44. Publishers, music labels, game developers, broadcasters and content producers are dealing with disruptive innovations
that put serious pressure on their current business models. Business models that have been effective for decades are
devaluating by the minute. The increasing power of disruptive online and mobile game changers enables location-based
and on-demand content consumption. As a consequence of these supercharged technological advancements, consumer
behavior is changing rapidly. On a societal level, media technologies are creating unprecedented new opportunities for
serving local communities. At the same time, media and entertainment markets have never been more global. Apple’s
iPhone (released in June 2007) and iPad (released in April 2010) have kick-started an incredibly fast growing market for
personalized media consumption on smart phones and tablets. Facebook (launched in February 2004) and Twitter
(launched in July 2006) have obtained a user base that exceeds 1 billion (Facebook) and 500 million (Twitter) users
worldwide. To survive this phase of disruption, media companies will need to develop added value ecosystems.
The competitive advantage of media companies is predominantly dependent on
their capability to adapt to disruptive online and mobile game changers.
Media and entertainment companies operate on the cutting edge of information, communication, interaction and
participation. Consumers, businesses and public institutions are embracing online and mobile functionalities, albeit at
their own pace. Traditional circulation figures, ratings and eyeballs are in decline and so are revenues from advertisers.
Readers, listeners, viewers, players and researchers are all, in one form or another, rapidly becoming users. Users expect a
personalized experience. This is a paradigm shift in which the classical and mass market push model is becoming less
relevant and added value ecosystems are the best option for survival. Communication and distribution channels are
converging and market boundaries are fading away. Many new entrants are turning these merging markets into
intensified competitive arenas. The result is price pressure, fragmentation and increased uncertainty in the return on
investment of innovation strategies. On the other hand, the number of innovative and participative media formats has
never been as high as it is in today’s media and entertainment markets. It is a perfect storm for media and entertainment
companies, one that is surely to leave more than a few media shipwrecks in the remaining fleet of media veterans.
Disruptive
Media
Model
54. Insight into
behavioral
patterns
Hardware
suppliers
Infrastructure
(license)
Large volume
contract
revenues
Infrastructure
maintenance
Marketing
and sales
Licensors
Installed
customer base
Disruptive Cable & Telco Model
most relevant for both cable companies and telecommunication providers
Designed by Thaesis, 2013
On-demand /
locations-based
customer base
= traditional components
= disruptive components
Retail
Brand
(Premium)
content
accessibility
Premium
content
revenues
Infrastructure
costs
Marketing and
sales costs
Customer
base
Total solutions
development
Behavioral
insight
revenues
Media
technology
companies
Social networks
Mass media
campaigns
Mobile
coverage
On-demand /
location-based
revenues
Smartphones
Tablets
Shared status /
location-based
stories
On-demand /
location-based
total solutions
Customer
service
Customer
data
On-demand /
location-based
development
55. Mobile coverage and content accessibility used to be completely separate markets. With the rise of wide bandwidth
distribution networks and 4G-ready mobile devices, telecommunication providers are more and more disrupting cable
companies. By creating nationwide crowdsourced WiFi-networks, cable companies are striking back. Tablets and
smartphones have become the center of user experience and total solutions for on-demand or location-based content are
the way forward. Because cable companies and telecommunication providers are the gateways to any content distributed
over the internet, from voice to video, they gain enormous insights into behavioral patterns. These insights are a value
proposition in itself, only restricted by privacy legislation. Distribution will become a commodity and consumers will be
less and less willing to pay a premium price. In a nutshell, this means that revenues from large volume contracts and
premium content will decrease while on-demand and location-based revenues will increase. The ability to deliver true
customer service will be an incredible differentiator for cable companies and telecommunication providers.
Telecommunication providers, fueled by the rise of wide bandwith distribution
networks and 4G-ready mobile devices, are disrupting cable companies.
Established network providers will have difficulties dealing with the disruption in their markets. Traditional fixed contracts
are competing with freemium alternatives that operate on a global scale. Content subscriptions are moving away from the
television screen towards mobile screens. Content is already recorded, edited, produced and distributed digitally. Media
producers and broadcasters are able to cut out the middle man, just as media users are able to cut the cord. Cable
companies are responding by developing apps for live and on-demand content consumption. Telecommunication
providers are responding by investing in even faster data networks. This upwards move towards higher quality
propositions is a characteristic of established market leaders dealing with disruption. New market entrants start at the
lower end and slowly move up-market. Consumers looking for a fair price for coverage and access to content have a
much bigger choice against lower prices.
Disruptive
Cable & Telco
Model
65. Public sector
Medical
knowledge
Compensations
Research and
development
Production and
care delivery
Local
communities
Prevention
Societies
Disruptive Medical Model
most relevant for medical organizations and pharmaceutical companies
Designed by Thaesis, 2013
Individual
patients
= traditional components
= disruptive components
Medical
institutions and
pharmacies
Medical
capabilities
Treatment
Revenues from
patents
Research and
development
costs
Production and
care delivery
costs
Medical
competencies
Data and
technology
costs
Monitor and
control
revenues
Online and
mobile health
platforms
Media
technology
companies
Patient
communities
Patient
empowerment
Self-diagnosis
methodologies
Social networks
Regulated
relationships
Big data
analysis
Facilitation of
self-diagnosis
66. In most Western societies, the quality of healthcare and medical facilities has reached an impressive baseline due to series
of innovations. To name just a few: self-testing, long distance monitoring and imaging, biotechnology and big data
analysis. Healthcare providers and pharmaceutical companies are gaining more knowledge, competences and capabilities
every day. Patients spend less time in hospital beds: from an average ten to an average of four days, a decrease of 60% in
less than two decades. Life expectancy has significantly improved and more focus has been put on prevention.
Nevertheless, medical organizations and pharmaceutical companies will need to battle a number of economic challenges.
The relatively higher quality level comes with a price. Better and faster research, development, prevention and treatment
result in higher medical costs. Ageing populations are responsible for an undiminished increase in the demand for care,
while the gross national product of most western societies is decreasing.
Medical organizations and pharmaceutical companies will need to battle a
number of economic challenges while technology, legislation and patient em-
powerment are disrupting the status quo.
While competition in medical markets is stimulated, it is at the same time carefully monitored and restricted by
competition commissions and fair trade offices. While research and development in medicine is a collective interest,
realizing a return on investment before medicine become generic is a private strategy. Technology, legislation and patient
empowerment are disrupting this status quo. In response, medical organizations and pharmaceutical companies are
evaluating a number of strategic options. One option is to differentiate their portfolio on service and price levels to
achieve a competitive advantage. Other options include specialization by creating centers of expertise, outsourcing first
phase research programs to pharmaceutical start-ups and rearranging medical tasks between less knowledge-intensive
medical organizations. The most disruptive option is to embrace self-diagnosis as a means to simplify the medical model
and enable individuals to non-stop monitor and control their health. While a patient will always remain a patient, each
individual is empowered to bear some of the responsibility for many different roles in the medical process.
Disruptive
Medical
Model
76. Affiliate
partners
Operational
staff
Lower
transactional
revenues
Operations
Marketing
Local
communities
Travel
experiences
Mass market
Disruptive Travel Model
most relevant for airlines and travel agencies
Designed by Thaesis, 2013
Niche markets
= traditional components
= disruptive components
Online
and mobile
channels
Brand
Travel
destinations
Higher
operational and
marketing costs
Lower
entry costs
Concessions
Accreditations
Reputation
Lower
transaction
costs
Higher revenues
from services
Local
communities
Social networks
Status stories
Services in local
communities
Network in local
communities
Service
development
Affiliate
networks
77. The travel and leisure markets are changing incredibly fast. Travellers from emerging economies and established
economies alike are facilitated in their everlasting need for unique destinations and experiences against affordable prices.
Low-cost airlines have added more routes to their destinations. Bookings have migrated to online and mobile channels
almost completely. And social travel has become a booming business, albeit for much more fragmented target groups:
niche markets will become the new mass market. Online and mobile technologies have lowered entry costs and
transaction costs, but the promise of transparency has not yet fully been delivered. Airline fares have become much more
dynamic and therefore almost inscrutable. Hotel fees, booking fees and commission fees are increasingly frustrating for
travellers that are hunting for a fair deal. However, pricing will only stay a differentiator in the lowest income groups.
Because of a lack of trust, low-cost airlines and traditional travel agencies will be disrupted by their more social and
customer-centric counterparts. Mainstream airlines and social travel agencies will have to find better ways to add value
against a reasonable price.
Local communities from around the globe are connected via social media and
the unbeaten path will be replaced by the untweeted or unposted path. That’s
where the 21st-century travelers will want to go. And that’s where they will be in
need of services.
Since affiliate models are only sustainable if the consumer receives some of the benefits, a greater service orientation
towards travelers’ personal desires and budgets is needed. The inevitable transparency in travel will result in even faster
cycles of early bird discounts and last minute deals. In response, services in local communities will be positioned with a
premium. Local communities will become travel intermediaries and status stories will become the heart of any marketing
activity. Travel and leisure have always been social activities. Now the time has come for airlines and travel agencies to
develop services that welcome niche markets. Be at their service and they will spread the word on a massive scale for you.
Disruptive
Travel
Model
87. Non-profit
sector
Trust
Taxes
Public
representation
Public tasks
Private
sector
Public value
Citizens
Disruptive Government Model
most relevant for public organizations and governments
Designed by Thaesis, 2013
Civil society
= traditional components
= disruptive components
Institutions
Laws
Legislation
Elections and
governance
Salaries
Materials
Buildings
Civil servants
Media
technology
Media
technologies
Media
technology
companies
Participation
Community
services
Network
Services co-
development
and co-creation
Social networks
Communication
Businesses
Network
regulation
88. Governments are in the middle of an economic crisis (or an economic boom), rising (or absent) unemployment numbers,
ageing (or rejuvenating) populations and climate change. Governments from around the world are also faced with
changes in expectations from citizens, civil society and businesses. These changes in expectations are accelerated by
heavily adopted media technologies that are lifting traditional restrictions to participation and communication. Our
collective challenges increasingly span national, regional or local borders and require resources and expertise to be
mobilized on a scale that far exceeds existing structures and procedures. The pace to which governments are currently
adapting and evolving is insufficient. Networks, not institutions, across public, private and non-profit sectors are needed
to co-develop and co-create public value. Networks have no sole leader but do need to be regulated to protect a fair
distribution of value between its members. The size of the civil service will be significantly reduced by transforming top-
down public procedures into bottom-up community services. Careful and reliable governments will be disrupted by
responsive and adaptive public networks.
Governments, as opposed to businesses, are more than willing to share best
practices in the development of community services. A common strategy to
create social value in public networks will create synergies on a global scale.
Our democracies will correspondingly embrace technocratic principles to enable social value in public networks. Open
data and open access are steps towards open governments, in which perspectives from all stakeholders can be
incorporated in decision-making and problem-solving. The most important shift in disrupting public organizations and
governments is the shift from performance to value. While performance is a metric based on the institutional activities,
value is only measurable from the point of view of citizens or private parties. And whether these are located in developed
or emerging economies, their social entrepreneurship can leverage the innovative potential of entrepreneurship for social
and economical development. Keywords of our future public organizations and governments are: transparent, responsive,
adaptive and fair. To stay relevant and effective, public organizations and governments will continuously evolve.
Disruptive
Government
Model
98. Material
suppliers
Patents and
brands
Uniform
product
revenues
Supply chain
management
MarketingProducers
Authentic
eco-friendly
products
Global
customers
Disruptive Consumer Goods Model
most relevant for fast moving consumer goods companies
Designed by Thaesis, 2013
Local
customers
= traditional components
= disruptive components
Global
distribution
networks
Purchasing
power
Universally
uniform
products
Eco-friendly
product
revenues
Materials and
production
costs
Marketing
costs
Local co-
creation
networks
Local produc-
tion and co-
creation costs
Local
product
revenues
Local
distribution
networks
Media
technology
companies
Reviews
Locally produ-
ced co-created
products
Local
production
networks
Local
co-creation
Social networks
Advertisements
Local
production
99. Faced with universally uniform products, consumers crave a stronger, more authentic connection with the goods they
consume. Authentic, storied, co-created and eco-friendly products that are made and consumed locally are disrupting
products from large industrial consumer goods companies that are only interested in their bottom line. Eco-conscious
consumers are concerned about the unsustainability of globalized hyper-production. In response, many large consumer
goods companies are scrambling to make parts of (if not their entire) supply chain organic, ethical, fairtrade or eco. On
the flipside, it’s becoming ever-easier for consumers to market their homemade wares to others. As a result, local
communities are enjoying the ever-wider range of quirky, unique and small-scale producers. Indeed, many consumers
believe in the virtues of local producers. They see them as members of their community, and are therefore more
trustworthy.
Authentic, storied, co-created eco-friendly products that are made and consu-
med locally are disrupting products from large industrial consumer goods
companies that are only interested in their bottom line.
Large consumer goods companies with a portfolio of brands are highlighting the local elements of their products in
response. Next to locality, health benefits represent a premium value for consumers as well. Embedding health benefits
into consumer products offers consumers the best of both worlds: simple, easy, painless steps to leading a healthier
lifestyle. Despite an abundance of information available to consumers, useful, timely and accessible data is still rare.
Consumers are embracing tools that check, track or alert them to personalized information, present information in an
easy-to-understand format, and even offer relevant, specific data to help them make decisions related to consumer goods.
With media technologies, consumers can do this with easy-to-use and convenient tools that offer them personal, filtered,
curated and real-time information. Valuable information can also be stored, searched and distributed on a global scale.
Pricing will continue to be a fluid and ever-changing process. Every consumer has a voice which, if spoken in the right
way, by and to the right people, in the right places, can be loud: reviews exceed advertisements in many ways.
Disruptive
Consumer
Goods
Model
109. Product
suppliers
Shopping
assistants
Retail
margin
Category
management
Marketing
and sales
Municipalities
After sales
service
Local
customers
Disruptive Retail Model
most relevant for fashion retailers
Designed by Thaesis, 2013
Global
customers
= traditional components
= disruptive components
In store, online
and mobile
Stores
Products and
categories
Property
value
margin
Personnel,
stores and
branding
Interaction
design costs
Brands
Retail
technologies
Affiliate
revenues
Omnichannel
customer
journey
NFC-technology
mobile payment
suppliers
Touchpoints
with a human
touch
Seamless
omnichannel
experience
Customer
insight
Interaction
design
Affiliates
Customer
loyalty
programs
110. Customer insight is at the heart of the disruptive retail model. Retail companies need to invest in the customer journey,
defining customer touch points across stores, online channels and mobile apps. Branding needs to become about more
than just generating in store traffic. Disruptive brands create a relentless competitive advantage, a seamless customer
experience and an omnichannel human touch in retail. Traditional retail conventions about scale and mass markets need
to be overthrown by hybrid retail propositions that are close aligned with individual patterns of media interaction. No
longer can supply and demand be predicated on the preconditions of retail space, sales per square foot and seasonality
alone. Online and mobile marketing needs to become personalized, rapidly changing and real-time location dependent.
Near field communication and mobile wallets have succeeded barcodes and cash registers. Loyalty programs are
improbably limited when compared to big data analysis of omnichannel routing and conversion.
Disruptive brands create a relentless competitive advantage, a seamless customer
experience and an omnichannel human touch in retail.
Customers already spend more than half of their shopping time and almost a third of their shopping budget in online and
mobile stores. Same day delivery is no longer a luxury, but a common market condition. A globally growing middle class is
disrupting traditional geographic market boundaries and the development time for new or temporary retail concepts is
accelerating. Private label products are the only category to take a chance on escaping fierce pricing wars. Producers have
already cut out most of the wholesale companies and for strong brands, retailers are next on the disruptive hit list.
However, shopping has always been, and will always be, a social activity. Discovery, sharing and experimenting has
moved to social media platforms almost completely. Customer service is no longer a receptive troubleshooter but asks for
proactive monitoring and early stage problem identification and resolution. The relationship between producers, retailers
and consumers has moved from transactional to relational. Product features allow for co-creation and personalization,
brand development is as much about advertising as it is about community building. In retail, companies can choose
between disrupt - gain trust, build insights and provide omnichannel solutions with a human touch - or be disrupted.
Disruptive
Retail
Model
116. We welcome your questions, suggestions and requests.
Ouke Arts
Partner
@oukearts
+31 35 737 04 27
ouke.arts@thaesis.nl
Thaesis
The boardroom acceleration company
's-Gravelandseweg 71
1217 EJ Hilversum, The Netherlands
http://www.thaesis.com/en/