Definition: What are digital business models?
Digital business models are business models in which value creation is largely based on digital technologies. Unlike the mere digitization of existing processes, the focus is on fundamentally new ways of creating value for customers and generating revenue.
Key characteristics of digital business models:
- Digital value proposition: The core product or core service is delivered digitally or enabled digitally
- Scalability: Growth without proportional resource effort—an additional user costs almost nothing
- Network effects: The value of the offering increases with the number of users
- Data centricity: Data as a strategic resource for personalization, optimization, and new services
The most important types of digital business models
Platform business models
Intermediation between two or more user groups. The platform itself often owns no physical assets. Examples: Airbnb (accommodation), Uber (mobility), Amazon Marketplace (retail). Revenue via brokerage commissions, fees, or advertising.
Software as a Service (SaaS)
Cloud-based software in a subscription model. Customers use the software via the browser; updates and hosting included. Examples: Salesforce, Slack, HubSpot. Revenue model: Monthly or annual subscription.
Freemium
Free basic version with a premium upgrade. Large user base through free entry; monetization via conversion to the paid version. Examples: Spotify, Dropbox, LinkedIn.
Data- and AI-based models
Data-driven and AI-powered business models use data as a core resource: personalization, prediction, automation. Examples: recommendation engines, predictive maintenance, AI-powered consulting.
E-commerce & D2C
Direct online sales to end customers, without intermediaries. Combined with subscription models (e.g., HelloFresh) or marketplaces.
Digital ecosystems
Connected products and services that form a comprehensive ecosystem. Customers are retained across multiple touchpoints. Examples: Apple (hardware + software + services), Amazon (store + AWS + Prime + Alexa).
Characteristics and success factors
- Customer-centric: Digital business models solve real customer problems better, faster, or more cost-effectively than alternatives—the value proposition is central
- Data-driven: Continuous use of data to improve the offering and personalize it
- Network effects: The more users, the more valuable the offering—the key to exponential scaling
- Low marginal costs: An additional user causes hardly any additional costs—the basis for high margins
- Agile development: Rapid iteration, data-based decisions, Lean Startup principles
- Lock-in effects: Switching costs for users increase due to data, habits, and integrations
Practical Examples by Industry
- Manufacturing & mechanical engineering: Servitization—machines as a service with predictive maintenance and a pay-per-use model
- Consulting & professional services: Online platforms for knowledge transfer, digital consulting products, membership models
- Retail: Omnichannel commerce, marketplace models, subscription boxes
- Real estate: PropTech platforms for rentals, digital property management, smart building services
- Healthcare: Telemedicine, digital therapy apps, AI-powered diagnostics
Digital business models for SMEs
Digital business models are not only for startups and large corporations. SMEs, too, can successfully build digital revenue streams:
- Digitally extend existing strengths: Enhance your physical product with digital services (e.g., monitoring dashboard, configurator, customer portal)
- Monetize knowledge: Market industry expertise as an online course, consulting platform, or digital tool
- Build direct sales: Complement or replace traditional sales channels with D2C channels
- Use data: Leverage existing data for new services or better customer engagement
- Introduce subscription models: Build recurring revenue through subscription services
- Use no-code/low-code: Develop and test digital products without deep programming knowledge
How to develop a digital business model
- Identify the customer problem: Which problem of your target group can you solve better digitally? (Jobs to Be Done)
- Analyze business model patterns: Which digital patterns fit your industry and your strengths?
- Design the value proposition: Use the Value Proposition Canvas to sharpen the digital offering
- Map the business model on a canvas: Visualize the new model in the Business Model Canvas
- Validate: Test assumptions with an MVP and real customers
- Scale: Expand successful models and implement the go-to-market strategy
Develop a digital business model?
We support you from the idea to a validated digital business model—with proven methods and industry expertise.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a digital business model?
A digital business model creates and delivers its core value primarily through digital technologies and channels. It is characterized by high scalability, low marginal costs, and often network effects. Typical forms include SaaS, platforms, freemium models, and data-based services.
Can traditional companies also build digital business models?
Yes—and they should. Traditional companies often have advantages: existing customer relationships, industry knowledge, and data. The key is to build digital models initially as an add-on (e.g., digital services for the physical product) and then expand them step by step.
Which digital business model is right for my SME?
That depends on your industry and strengths. For service providers, SaaS or membership models are often suitable. For manufacturers, servitization (product + digital service) is promising. For retailers, marketplace or D2C models are a good fit. Start with an analysis of your business model patterns and customer needs.
What are the biggest risks of digital business models?
The most common risks are: lack of product–market fit (the problem does not exist or the solution does not fit), customer acquisition costs that are too high, insufficient technical execution capability, and underestimating change management. Lean Startup methods help minimize these risks early on.