hbr.org/2017/07/finding-the-platform-in-your-product

Preview meta tags from the hbr.org website.

Linked Hostnames

12

Thumbnail

Search Engine Appearance

Google

https://hbr.org/2017/07/finding-the-platform-in-your-product

Finding the Platform in Your Product

Five of the 10 most valuable companies in the world today—Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, Facebook, and Microsoft—derive much of their worth from their multisided platforms, which facilitate interactions or transactions between parties. Many MSPs are more valuable than companies in the same industries that provide only products or services: For instance, Airbnb is now worth more than Marriott, the world’s largest hotel chain. However, companies that weren’t born as platform businesses rarely realize that they can—at least partially—turn their offerings into one, say the authors. And even if they do realize it, they often wander in the dark searching for a strategy to achieve this transformation. In this article, Hagiu and Altman provide a framework for doing so. They lay out four specific ways in which products and services can be turned into platforms and examine the strategic advantages and pitfalls of each: (1) opening the door to third parties; (2) connecting customers; (3) connecting products to connect customers; and (4) becoming a supplier to a multisided platform. These ideas can be used by physical as well as online businesses.



Bing

Finding the Platform in Your Product

https://hbr.org/2017/07/finding-the-platform-in-your-product

Five of the 10 most valuable companies in the world today—Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, Facebook, and Microsoft—derive much of their worth from their multisided platforms, which facilitate interactions or transactions between parties. Many MSPs are more valuable than companies in the same industries that provide only products or services: For instance, Airbnb is now worth more than Marriott, the world’s largest hotel chain. However, companies that weren’t born as platform businesses rarely realize that they can—at least partially—turn their offerings into one, say the authors. And even if they do realize it, they often wander in the dark searching for a strategy to achieve this transformation. In this article, Hagiu and Altman provide a framework for doing so. They lay out four specific ways in which products and services can be turned into platforms and examine the strategic advantages and pitfalls of each: (1) opening the door to third parties; (2) connecting customers; (3) connecting products to connect customers; and (4) becoming a supplier to a multisided platform. These ideas can be used by physical as well as online businesses.



DuckDuckGo

https://hbr.org/2017/07/finding-the-platform-in-your-product

Finding the Platform in Your Product

Five of the 10 most valuable companies in the world today—Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, Facebook, and Microsoft—derive much of their worth from their multisided platforms, which facilitate interactions or transactions between parties. Many MSPs are more valuable than companies in the same industries that provide only products or services: For instance, Airbnb is now worth more than Marriott, the world’s largest hotel chain. However, companies that weren’t born as platform businesses rarely realize that they can—at least partially—turn their offerings into one, say the authors. And even if they do realize it, they often wander in the dark searching for a strategy to achieve this transformation. In this article, Hagiu and Altman provide a framework for doing so. They lay out four specific ways in which products and services can be turned into platforms and examine the strategic advantages and pitfalls of each: (1) opening the door to third parties; (2) connecting customers; (3) connecting products to connect customers; and (4) becoming a supplier to a multisided platform. These ideas can be used by physical as well as online businesses.

  • General Meta Tags

    32
    • title
      Is There a Platform in Your Product?
    • title
      Harvard Business Review Logo
    • title
      Harvard Business Review Logo
    • title
      Harvard Business Review Logo
    • title
      Harvard Business Review Logo
  • Open Graph Meta Tags

    6
    • og:type
      article
    • og:site_name
      Harvard Business Review
    • og:type
      article
    • og:description
      Five of the 10 most valuable companies in the world today—Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, Facebook, and Microsoft—derive much of their worth from their multisided platforms, which facilitate interactions or transactions between parties. Many MSPs are more valuable than companies in the same industries that provide only products or services: For instance, Airbnb is now worth more than Marriott, the world’s largest hotel chain. However, companies that weren’t born as platform businesses rarely realize that they can—at least partially—turn their offerings into one, say the authors. And even if they do realize it, they often wander in the dark searching for a strategy to achieve this transformation. In this article, Hagiu and Altman provide a framework for doing so. They lay out four specific ways in which products and services can be turned into platforms and examine the strategic advantages and pitfalls of each: (1) opening the door to third parties; (2) connecting customers; (3) connecting products to connect customers; and (4) becoming a supplier to a multisided platform. These ideas can be used by physical as well as online businesses.
    • og:image
      /resources/images/article_assets/2017/06/R1704G_HILGER.jpg
  • Twitter Meta Tags

    4
    • twitter:card
      summary_large_image
    • twitter:creator
      @harvardbiz
    • twitter:site
      @harvardbiz
    • twitter:image
      /resources/images/article_assets/2017/06/R1704G_HILGER.jpg
  • Link Tags

    20
    • apple-touch-icon
      /resources/images/apple-touch-icon.png
    • dns-prefetch
      //js-agent.newrelic.com/
    • dns-prefetch
      //assets.adobedtm.com
    • dns-prefetch
      //platform.hbr.org
    • dns-prefetch
      //securepubads.g.doubleclick.net

Links

87