Circular Business Models for the Bio-Economy: A Review and New Directions for Future Research
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Research Method
3. Research Results
3.1. Value Proposition
3.2. Key Activities
3.3. Key Resources
3.4. Key Partners
3.5. Customer Relationship
3.6. Channels
3.7. Customer Segments
3.8. Cost Structure
3.9. Revenue Streams
4. Barriers to Circular Business Model Implementation in a Bio-Economy
4.1. Balancing the Triple Bottom Line Goals in Designing Circular Business Model Value Propositions
- How to integrate circularity principles for bio-based products into the design of circular business models?
- How to implement the circularity thinking into the design, development, and implementation phases of offer development?
- How to include interests of diverse stakeholders (including government and citizens) from society to be part of circular business models?
- How to develop offers that are commercially attractive without governmental support in order to successfully compete on their own merits with traditional or existing products?
4.2. Organizing Value Networks for Cocreation of Value
- How to orchestrate network actors into joining forces for value cocreation? What roles and responsibilities should network or ecosystem actors take for implementation of circular business models?
- How to integrate a resource balance into the design and development of the business model? How to evaluate which alternative uses of resources are most applicable to realize the goals of the bio-economy?
- Which organizational capabilities will be critical in incentivizing network actors to adopt circular business models? How can companies develop missing capabilities?
4.3. Developing Value Delivery Networks for Target Customer Segments
- How to identify appropriate customer segments for circular business models? What customer characteristics are unique for early acceptance of the goals of a bio-economy?
- How to utilize novel channels for efficient delivery? How can the channel involve new actors (e.g., SMEs) that specialize in higher competence in service delivery?
- How to increase the customers’ readiness to adopt a circular business model? What factors can enable behavioral changes in customers?
4.4. Defining Sustainable Revenue Models for Value Capture
- How to design multiactor revenue models for circular business models? How to scale such specialized revenue models from one region to another or from one country to another?
- How to incentivize private and public actors to support the early investment costs? How do they ensure that circular business models survive without favorable support structures?
- How to match value creation with value capturing activities within a traditional industry such as forestry to transform into a significantly different circular business model?
4.5. Barriers to Circular Business Model Alignment
- How can customer demands, which focus on designing an offer that the customer wants to buy, be aligned with the aim of utilizing the latest and most innovative bio-based technology for a market that does not exist yet? This dilemma shows a need for alignment between the customer’s readiness and acceptance of innovative technology. How can bio-economy industrial dynamics cope with this technological pull and push dilemma?
- How can high and specific customer requirements, which might be difficult for the provider firm to fulfil, such as that the provider takes a certain responsibility or fulfills specific standards (e.g., in terms of environmental impact), be aligned with the new capabilities requirement?
- How can individual and common interests of ecosystem actors be aligned to create a well-functioning business ecosystem to, for example, manage resource flows and competences? How can a company fairly divide the revenue among the ecosystem actors, when certain actors may lose their dominant ecosystem position? How does a company ensure that individual interests are overlooked to achieve the common good through a circular business model in a bio-economy?
- How can the focal actor’s interest in exploiting existing technologies be aligned with the need to invest in the exploration of new technologies even though this is related to higher levels of uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity?
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reim, W.; Parida, V.; Sjödin, D.R. Circular Business Models for the Bio-Economy: A Review and New Directions for Future Research. Sustainability 2019, 11, 2558. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11092558
Reim W, Parida V, Sjödin DR. Circular Business Models for the Bio-Economy: A Review and New Directions for Future Research. Sustainability. 2019; 11(9):2558. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11092558
Chicago/Turabian StyleReim, Wiebke, Vinit Parida, and David R. Sjödin. 2019. "Circular Business Models for the Bio-Economy: A Review and New Directions for Future Research" Sustainability 11, no. 9: 2558. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11092558
APA StyleReim, W., Parida, V., & Sjödin, D. R. (2019). Circular Business Models for the Bio-Economy: A Review and New Directions for Future Research. Sustainability, 11(9), 2558. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11092558