On this episode of the Digitally Human podcast, Alexander Osterwalder, creator of the Business Model Canvas and co-founder of Strategyzer, argues that most companies are solving the wrong problem when they focus on their product.
He walks through two contrasting stories, Oura versus Whoop and the failed launch of the original Nespresso machine, to show why a strong business model beats a strong product every time. He also explains why over 90% of AI initiatives inside large companies fail, why he thinks the term "innovation" should be retired, and the dual operating system, explore and exploit, that keeps companies like Amazon reinventing themselves while they're still winning.
Alexander also opens up about the PhD dissertation that became a global business tool, the comic book he wrote with his own children to teach them entrepreneurship, and which company's stock he'd short because of its people-based business model.
In this episode:
- Why business models beat products, every time
- The explore and exploit system behind lasting companies
- Where AI creates a real competitive moat
- What he got wrong before Strategyzer got it right
- Rapid fire: the books, beliefs and advice he's abandoned
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🔍 Inside the Episode:
0:00 – Introduction
1:20 – The PhD thesis that became a global business tool
5:45 – What actually separates great entrepreneurs from good ones
9:44 – Is entrepreneurship something you're born with?
15:55 – Teaching his own kids entrepreneurship through a comic book
23:00 – Oura vs Whoop: why the business model wins
26:38 – The Nespresso failure that became a multi-billion pound business
30:22 – The dual operating system top founders swear by
39:02 – Why he says the word "innovation" is dead
43:00 – Where AI actually creates a business moat
58:11 – Rapid fire: books, regrets, and abandoned beliefs