Revenue Model Types and Examples - AltexSoft
Revenue Model Types and Examples - AltexSoft
Revenue Model Types and Examples - AltexSoft
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A business starts with an idea of how to generate value for a customer. So, if it’s a person looking for a
table, we can produce a table, market it, ship it, receive payment for it — and, that’s our business model.
The total amount of money earned, in other words revenue, is the coal that keeps our train running.
Depending on the business model’s complexity, revenue will cover manufacturing, distribution,
marketing, and other costs, until we get profit.
But profit doesn’t keep the business alive, revenue does. Besides a simple transactional logic, there are
many ways we can generate revenue, cover our own expenses, distribute products, and so on. That’s
even truer for software companies: Web distribution and the nature of software creates various
possibilities to monetize code. Think of licensed/freemium apps, service subscriptions, and others. All of
these represent a certain mechanism that specifies how business generates revenue. The structure of it
is called a revenue model.
For those exploring the basics of business strategy planning, we’ll elaborate on the definition of the
revenue model, and the correlation between business models and revenue streams. We’ll also analyze
different types of revenue models and look at some examples to scrutinize the pros and cons of each
approach. Finally, we’ll reflect on how to choose or develop a model for your business.
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There are numerous forms of business models that can’t be classified in a single list because each part is
highly individual to the industry, type of product/service, audience, or profitability. Business models are
often depicted strategically on a business model canvas. This is a compound representation of all the key
elements of a BM.
So, in a nutshell, the BM describes how a business will work from the standpoint of value generation. To
describe how the company generates income, revenue models are used.
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A revenue model is a part of the business model that explains different mechanisms of income
generation and its sources. This is a high level answer to the question that asks how we will generate
revenue from the value we bring to a certain customer group.
The simplest example of a revenue model is a high traffic blog that places ads to earn profit. Web
resources that generate content for the public, e.g. news (value), will make use of its traffic (audience), to
place ads. The ads in turn will generate revenue that a website will use to cover its maintenance costs
and staff salaries, leaving the profit.
A single source of revenue a business generates is called a revenue stream. These are often divided by
customer segments that bring revenue via a given method. The two terms – revenue stream and revenue
model – are often used interchangeably, since from the business perspective, the subscription revenue
model will have a revenue stream coming from subscriptions. However, models can name multiple
streams divided into customer segments, while the principle of revenue generation (subscription) will
remain the same.
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Here we will pay more attention to the most common revenue models used in the software industry and
online business.
Transaction-based model
A transaction-based model is a classic way a business can earn money. The revenue is generated by
directly selling an item or a service to a customer. The customer can be another company (B2B) or a
consumer (B2C). The price of the product or service constitutes the production costs and margin.
Increasing the margin, the business is able to generate more income from sales.
Selling products or services entails using different pricing tactics. While some of them may be considered
a separate revenue model, these are often used in pairs. Because pricing tactics can be seen as pricing
plans in a software business, we can clearly define the following types.
1. Licensing/one-time purchase. This entails selling a software product by license that can be used by
a single user or a group of users. The general idea is to offer a product that requires making only one
payment for it, e.g. Microsoft Windows, Apache Server, a majority of video games.
2. Subscription/recurring payment. Unlike licensing, a user receives access to the software by paying
a subscription fee on a monthly/annual basis, e.g. Netflix, Spotify, Adobe products.
3. Pay-per-use. This pricing tactic is mostly used by different cloud-based products and services that
charge you for the computing powers/memory/resources/time used. Examples are Amazon Web
Services, and Google Cloud Platform.
4. Freemium/upselling. Freemium is a type of app monetization in which a user may access the main
product for free, but will be charged for additional functions, services, bonuses, plugins, or extensions,
e.g. Skype, Evernote, some video games.
5. Hybrid pricing. Sometimes pricing plans are a mixture of more than one. So that freemium plan
might morph into some form of pay-per-use tiered plan. After passing some limit in computation or
resources, a user can be forced or offered to use another type of pricing, for example Mailchimp,
Amazon Web Services, and SalesForce.
Various combinations of pricing tactics can be used simultaneously, which is more often seen in cloud-
based products that offer multiple pricing plans at once. The revenue model in this case remains based
around the transaction and purchases made by the customers. The difference in pricing tactics will
modify how the revenue is generated and basically depends on the type of product/service you sell.
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The cons: The cons will depend on the industry/product type and pricing tactics, as the model itself
imposes constant generation of sales with the help of advertising and marketing strategies. The only con
we might mention here is the financial burden connected with sales you will carry on your own.
Examples: Nearly any company that produces and sells its products: Samsung, Rolls Royce, Nike,
Microsoft, Apple, Boeing, McDonald’s.
Advertisement-based model
The advertisement-based revenue model is valid both for online and offline businesses. It’s often
used by websites/applications/marketplaces or any other web resource that attracts huge amounts of
traffic. Revenue is generated by selling ad space. This is one of the most standard methods of gaining
revenue.
The pros: Having a high-traffic resource allows you to monetize the ad space nearly instantly. Often,
there is a high demand on advertising space, especially with organic traffic and platforms with the target
audience.
The cons: Running advertising campaigns to gain web visibility on social networks is a standard
marketing activity with targeting instruments more precise than ever. However, advertisements are
everywhere, so you might think twice whether you want to distract a user by placing an ad in your app –
even if it is a secondary revenue stream.
Commission-based models
A commission revenue model is one of the most common ways businesses make money today. A
commission is a sum of money a retailer adds to the total cost of a product or service. A commission can
be assigned as a
· flat rate, a fixed sum of money for any type of transaction, e.g. a $450/300/1500 transaction is
charged with a $20 commission;
· percent of transaction size, e.g. a $100 transaction is charged with a 10 percent commission – $10;
or
· tiered commission, a percent or flat rate that grows based on the transaction volume, e.g. 50,000
transactions are charged with a 4 percent commission, 150,000 transactions with a 7 percent
commission.
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Marketplaces utilize commissions the most. The commission may be charged per marketplace or
transaction. This category also includes businesses that connect service providers/renters with
consumers. Think of any ride-hailing company, food delivery, or accommodation service.
The cons: There are many problems bound to the concept of a commission, but the major one goes to
the scalability of a business that’s attached to a transaction size or volume. In general, dependency on
the product supplier’s sales makes generating revenue require upfront investments and competitive
superiority.
Affiliate model
The affiliate model is similar to the commission model The difference is that a business receives its
commission from a seller, rather than a customer. The affiliate model is a contract between a supplier of
a product/service and a promoter. A promoter can be another business/media resource/blogger that
recommends a supplier’s product. The income will come as a percentage from sales or registrations
done via referral link.
This category of business also includes meta-search engines as a unique example. Meta searches can be
found almost everywhere. Their main difference with retailers is that they don’t sell products directly but
offer comparison and search as a value. Advertising and affiliate programs are the main revenue models
used to generate income in this case.
The pros: Just like advertisement, once you have a huge traffic resource, you might apply for an affiliate
program to earn money. This will bring you income without any investments because you will basically
generate traffic and leads for the affiliate program provider.
The cons: Unfortunately, the percentage of affiliate programs promised to the promoter is quite low.
Sometimes it fluctuates between 1-2 percent and requires a high volume of sales generated through
your links.
Examples: Blogging, event promoting platforms like Broadway.com or TheaterMania. Various examples
of Amazon affiliate websites, e.g. Cloud Living and ThisIsWhyImBroke.
The pros: The interest rate provides a clear view on what revenue a business will generate, as the
percent stays unchanged until the return period is over.
The cons: The regulations of an interest rate impact both the customer and business, and sometimes it
depends on the economic environment. Think of currency rate changes that impact potential and
existing borrowers.
It’s important to mention that there is a difference between a donation-based business and a charity
organization. A donation-based company is still required to pay taxes.
The pros: Because of the free access to the product, some companies manage to get increasingly
popular, so that donations become a major part of their revenue.
The cons: As long as this model is never used on its own, the revenue generated by it remains a
secondary source because of its random/unstable nature.
Define your value proposition: Define what your product is and what value it brings to the customer.
Not all products can be sold: Just remember when you upgraded your WinRAR to a full license. Also, you
can analyze the future traffic for your app to understand if you can use ads in it.
Explore the market state and customer groups. This step is to define your user persona and
understand how they usually buy things. Some markets are inclined to purchase just one product, some
are inclined to ignore upgrades, or in app purchases. A good example in this field is the death of music
selling platforms that were totally replaced by subscription based streaming services like YouTube Music,
Apple Music, Spotify, and others.
You may also explore the techniques on how to market your product in our dedicated article.
Analyze competitors and their products. You’ll need to learn what mechanisms and revenue streams
your competitors use and how they manage their costs. This information will probably show you the
market’s pitfalls and dead ends.
Looking at this simple matrix below, we can analyze the capabilities and needs of our company to help us
decide the type of revenue model to use.
How to choose revenue model framework
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Depending on our business model, the product or service we’re presenting to the user is a subject of
exchange. This is our value proposition on the market, so we are in charge of choosing what we want to
get back based on the market factors, target audience, etc.
1. Paid value proposition: In most cases, your value proposition costs money to use. Whether it’s a
service or a software product, a customer will need to pay in some form to gain access to your value.
Our revenue model in this case will be based around transactions. So, develop pricing tactics that will
depend on the nature of the product, and the type of audience you’re trying to reach, type of
deployment, specifics of product usage, etc.
2. Free-to-use value proposition: If the value proposition doesn’t require money to use or we choose it
to be free, then we need a third-party to generate revenue for us. This could be anything based on the
previously mentioned types, whether it’s ad space, donations, affiliate programs, or reselling.
The combination of two will basically present you with the revenue streams that will focus each of the
customer segments. In the case of the paid value proposition, each pricing plan will be a separate
revenue stream.
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Further Reading
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