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Effective Platform Product Management
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As discussed earlier, a platform business model is not a new concept; traditional marketplaces, libraries with subscription fees, or art exhibitions all follow platform business models. What is new is the power of technology added to a conventional platform business model. We saw earlier how a platform business model powered by technology enables global reach—for example, a marketplace where a buyer from Australia can buy goods from sellers in the US or a user from China can rent a movie from a video library in Europe. Platforms also facilitate scale and remove the constraint of limited physical resources such as space, workforce, and so on.
For example, an art exhibition can only accommodate a limited number of artists in a gallery and a marketplace can only fit a certain number of sellers, but digital platforms eliminate this limitation. Hence, to have a successful platform business, it is crucial to build the right digital platform, which brings us to the crux of this book. This book will focus on how to build the right digital platform to run a successful platform business. Before we move on to the depth of a digital platform strategy and the day-to-day execution of that strategy, let's look at what comprises a digital platform and the critical factors that should be considered while building one.
Here is a list of major factors to keep in mind while building a digital platform:
A successful digital platform should be able to quickly expand geographically and demographically. It should also be able to expand to new categories and new verticals. A good example here is Uber first expanding to multiple cities globally and then expanding to new business verticals, from ridesharing to food delivery via Uber Eats. The Uber platform's core aim was to match drivers to riders for ridesharing, which they expanded to food delivery by adding restaurants to the mix.
Now, all three entities—restaurants, drivers, and consumers—get benefits from the Uber platform. This expansion to the new vertical was only possible because Uber had a robust and highly scalable foundation of a digital platform. As we saw earlier, a successful platform business is one that can create a strong network effect, and to create a strong network effect for the platform business, a highly scalable digital platform is essential.
To give an example here, Amazon sells its products on Amazon Marketplace; in this case, Amazon must be treated as two different entities: a seller and a marketplace owner. Clear demarcation of ownership and responsibilities between all the parties involved is crucial so that each of them works within their areas of expertise and reduces the risk of errors.
Netflix is a perfect example of responding to evolving markets and changing consumer behavior. They understood the market requirement and introduced their streaming service at the right time. However, they continued their original Digital Video Disc (DVD) rental service as well. Flexibility, adaptability, and responding to change are essential for any business but they are a must for digital platforms, as the foundation of their business model is to work with the volatility of the demand side (consumers) and the supply side (producers).
We looked at the different factors that must be considered while building a digital platform. But now, let's look at what digital platform consists of. These days, the term digital platform has become a new buzzword. Companies are wrongly using digital platform as a synonym for either their Information Technology (IT) transformation or revamping their architecture without understanding what an End-to-End (E2E) digital platform is or what comprises a digital platform.
There are mainly three components to any digital platform: customer experience, business (I also like to call it core), and infrastructure, as illustrated in the following screenshot:
Figure 1.3 – Components of a digital platform
Each of these components can have sub-components, depending on the type of platform business or its size, but every sub-component can be categorized in one of these three major components. These components play an essential role in defining the platform strategy and creating platform roadmaps, and it is thus crucial to understand them. We will discuss each of these components while discussing platform strategy and roadmaps later in the book. But before that, let's understand what these components are, as follows:
For example, AWS is a platform that provides hardware, databases, Virtual Machines (VMs), and other essential deployment and development resources to other platform businesses such as Netflix, Facebook, and so on. In this example, resources provided by AWS become the infrastructure layer for platforms such as Netflix and Facebook. Their core services—such as personalization, content, and so on—become the business layer, and the mobile apps, Roku app, website, and so on become the experience layer.
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