Denis Oakley
5 min readNov 2, 2021

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Building Feedback Loops into Your Business Model

Now that we have spent some time thinking about other business models in the market place let’s start developing this one. Today we are going to look at key resources in the business model, and how feedback loops make your business model more powerful.

A good place to start next is to look at the key resources that you have or need. These are the building blocks that you use to create the value proposition. In other words, it’s what you know (in this case), the factories you have, the skilled staff, the patents and processes.

Business Model Key Resources

In our example, my key resource is ‘Denis Oakley’ as all the IP is contained within my head. Well, most of it. A lot of it can be found on this website (like this article) and other social media websites. Let’s separate this out.

  • IP
  • Brand & reputation
  • Platforms — website & social media accounts
Business model key resources - these are what you need in order to create the value that is going to solve your customers problem
Business model key resources — these are what you need in order to create the value that is going to solve your customers’ problem

We can phrase that in several different ways, I could break down IP into experience and processes for example. This is a good starter and lets us start exploring how we can develop the business model.

This key resources approach works better when you have an existing business. You want to leverage existing assets. Some may be relevant and useful. Others you may not want to use.

Key Resources in New Ventures

If you are creating a business model from scratch the approach here is to ask — what do I need to build the value proposition. If I was a new venture in car hire I could start by asking, what are the different types of key resources that I could use to create my value proposition.

Here are a few

  • I buy lots of cars
  • I lease lots of cars from a car leasor or manufacturer
  • I resell cars from an existing car rental company
  • I get consumers to lease me (or other consumers) the cars.

Straight off there are 4 different ways of getting the key resources. 1 asset-heavy. the others asset-light.

Business Model Feedback Loops

Let’s now have a look and check out the logic model that we are building for consulting. Experience and IP (key resources) enable me to deliver the value proposition. That solves the customer’s problem, and as I do that it generates more experience and IP making it easier to deliver better results as we keep doing this.

Business model feedback loop - here is an example of a feedback loop, where the better the business model works, the better it will work in future.
Business model feedback loop — here is an example of a feedback loop, where the better the business model works, the better it will work in future.

What we have now is a feedback loop.

These feedback loops are critical. What they do is they bring the different parts of the business model together. The better they are the tighter all the pieces are tied together. The tighter the pieces are tied together the strong and more powerful the business model is as a system for generating money and disrupting competitors.

Spend time to identify all your feedback loops

As we design the business model we will keep identifying them. I’m not going to do all of them as we go through each step. It is something that you should be doing. The value in the exercise is not the few minutes you spend writing on the paper. It’s the time that you spend suckling your pencil as you start seeing how things work.

As a rule of thumb — every component of the business model should be in one or more feedback loops. If you have written something down on the canvas and it is not in a feedback loop, then why is it there.

The feedback loops show how each component is critical to generating value or profit. If something is in the model and you can’t create a logical argument (feedback loop) for it to create value… cut it out.

As you look for feedback loops, sometimes you are going to spot gaps. Sometimes you will see that you need something else to make the feedback loop work. Fill that gap, and play with the new structure.

Uber Feedback Loop Example

Here’s an example that I have abstracted out of the canvas for Uber.

Uber business model feedback loops showing the power of driver acquisition
Uber business model feedback loops showing the power of driver acquisition

As they get more drivers they get more coverage. That means that Uber can do faster pickups, which delights customers, and so Uber is used more, and that creates more demand for drivers.

At the same time as coverage increases, drivers get more trips, which allows uber to offer lower prices (spreading fixed costs over more trips) which again generates more demand.

Use Feedback Loops to improve your business model

As you start seeing feedback loops like these arising from your business model it does a number of things.

You start to:

optimise the feedback loops

look for and design in feedback loops

These are critical ways to transform the way that you compete with other companies in the space.

What next?

If you don’t want to come back to the blog every day click this link to get posts in your inboxhttp://go.denis-oakley.com/newsletter .

Do explore these links to get more insights on how to build better business models

https://www.denis-oakley.com/7690-2/?feed_id=109&_unique_id=6180d8e0e86b0

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Denis Oakley

Entrepreneur, Strategist, Explorer, Runner and obsessively curious….I write about my journey with as much courage and vulnerability as I can summon