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    business-model-canvas

    Build, fill, stress-test, and iterate

    By @jk-0001
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    SKILL.md
    ---
    name: business-model-canvas
    description: Build, fill, stress-test, and iterate on a Business Model Canvas for a solopreneur. Use when designing or redesigning how a business creates, delivers, and captures value โ€” covering all nine BMC blocks plus solopreneur-specific adaptations like the "Time & Energy" block and unit economics validation. Trigger on "business model canvas", "design my business model", "how will I make money", "business model", "BMC", "value proposition canvas", "how does my business work", "monetize my idea".
    ---
    
    # Business Model Canvas
    
    ## Overview
    The Business Model Canvas (BMC) is a one-page strategic tool that maps every element of how your business works. For solopreneurs, the standard BMC needs one critical addition: a Time & Energy block, because your scarcest resource isn't money โ€” it's you. This playbook walks you through filling every block, validating the connections between them, and finding the weaknesses before the market does.
    
    ---
    
    ## The Nine (+1) Blocks
    
    Fill these in the order listed. Each block informs the next. Do not skip around.
    
    ### Block 1: Customer Segments
    **Question:** Who exactly are you serving?
    
    - Be specific. Not "small businesses." Define 1-3 tight segments.
    - For each segment: size estimate, pain level, budget, and how they currently solve the problem.
    - Rank segments by: pain intensity ร— willingness to pay ร— reachability.
    - Your primary segment (the one you build for first) should score highest across all three.
    
    ### Block 2: Value Propositions
    **Question:** What specific value do you deliver to each segment?
    
    - Write one value proposition per segment. Make it concrete and measurable.
    - Format: "[Customer type] can [achieve specific outcome] in [timeframe/way], instead of [current painful alternative]."
    - Quantify the value wherever possible: "Save 5 hours/week", "Cut churn by 30%", "Close deals 2x faster."
    - Identify whether your value is primarily: cost savings, time savings, quality improvement, risk reduction, or new capability.
    
    ### Block 3: Channels
    **Question:** How do customers discover and buy from you?
    
    - Map the full customer journey: Awareness โ†’ Consideration โ†’ Purchase โ†’ Delivery โ†’ Post-purchase.
    - For each stage, identify the specific channel or touchpoint. Example: Awareness = LinkedIn content + SEO blog. Consideration = free trial. Purchase = website checkout. Delivery = onboarding email sequence. Post-purchase = in-app onboarding.
    - Identify which channels are owned (blog, email list, social following), earned (word-of-mouth, reviews, press), or paid (ads). Aim for a mix, but as a solopreneur, owned and earned channels are your lifeline.
    
    ### Block 4: Customer Relationships
    **Question:** What kind of relationship does each customer segment expect?
    
    Choose the dominant model(s) for your business:
    - **Self-service:** Product does the work. Minimal human touch. (SaaS tools, digital products)
    - **Automated personal service:** Personalized at scale via automation. (Email sequences, chatbots, personalized dashboards)
    - **Community:** Customers help each other. (Forum, Slack group, peer network)
    - **One-to-one:** Direct personal interaction. (Consulting, coaching, white-glove service)
    
    As a solopreneur, self-service and automated are your scaling levers. One-to-one doesn't scale but can be your revenue bridge while building.
    
    ### Block 5: Revenue Streams
    **Question:** How does money flow in, and from whom?
    
    For each customer segment, define:
    - **Revenue model:** One-time purchase / Subscription (monthly or annual) / Usage-based / Freemium / Marketplace commission / Service retainer
    - **Price point:** Specific dollar amount per unit or per month
    - **Payment trigger:** What action causes the customer to pay?
    - **Expected ARPU (Average Revenue Per User):** Monthly and annual
    
    List ALL revenue streams. Most successful solopreneur businesses have 2-3 streams (e.g., a SaaS product + a consulting arm + a digital course).
    
    ### Block 6: Key Resources
    **Question:** What do you need to deliver your value proposition?
    
    As a solopreneur, resources are: your time, your skills, tools/software, and any intellectual property or data you have.
    
    - List every resource required.
    - Flag which are one-time investments vs. ongoing costs.
    - Identify the resource that is your biggest bottleneck. This often reveals a scaling problem early.
    
    ### Block 7: Key Activities
    **Question:** What must you actually DO every day/week to keep this business running?
    
    Split into:
    - **Product/Service delivery** โ€” the core thing you do to serve customers
    - **Customer acquisition** โ€” marketing, sales, outreach
    - **Operations & maintenance** โ€” support, invoicing, infrastructure, updates
    
    **Solopreneur time-check:** Estimate hours per week for each activity. If the total exceeds your available hours (realistically 30-40 for a full-time solo operation), something must be cut, automated, or outsourced.
    
    ### Block 8: Key Partnerships
    **Question:** What external relationships reduce risk or fill capability gaps?
    
    Partnerships for solopreneurs often include:
    - Tool/platform partnerships (integration partners, affiliate relationships)
    - Freelancer or contractor relationships for skills you lack
    - Distribution partners (someone who sends customers your way in exchange for value)
    - Technology dependencies (API providers, hosting, payment processors)
    
    **Risk flag:** If your business depends on a single platform or partner that could change terms or shut down, that's a critical risk. Identify these and have contingency plans.
    
    ### Block 9: Cost Structure
    **Question:** What does it cost to run this business?
    
    Categorize costs:
    - **Fixed costs** (don't change with volume): hosting, tools/subscriptions, insurance, legal
    - **Variable costs** (scale with revenue or customers): payment processing fees, ad spend, contractor hours, per-unit delivery costs
    - **One-time costs:** Initial setup, branding, first version of product
    
    Calculate your **monthly burn rate** (fixed + baseline variable) and your **break-even point** (how many customers or revenue needed to cover all costs).
    
    ### Block 10 (Solopreneur Addition): Time & Energy Budget
    **Question:** Can YOU actually do all of this without burning out?
    
    This block doesn't exist in the standard BMC but is the #1 killer of solopreneur businesses.
    
    - List every key activity from Block 7.
    - Assign realistic weekly hours to each.
    - Identify what can be automated (Block 7 cross-reference).
    - Identify what can be outsourced and at what cost (feeds back into Block 9).
    - Calculate your remaining personal hours for rest, learning, and life.
    
    **Rule:** If your time budget doesn't balance, the business model is broken. Fix it before launching โ€” not after burning out six months in.
    
    ---
    
    ## Validation Step: Cross-Block Consistency Check
    
    After filling all blocks, run these checks. Each one catches a common mistake:
    
    | Check | What to Verify |
    |---|---|
    | Value โ†” Segments | Does each value proposition directly address a pain that each segment actually has? |
    | Revenue โ†” Value | Are customers willing to pay the price you set for the value you deliver? (Cross-reference customer discovery data) |
    | Channels โ†” Segments | Can you actually reach your target segments through the channels you listed? |
    | Activities โ†” Time | Do your key activities fit within realistic available hours? (Block 10) |
    | Costs โ†” Revenue | Does your revenue exceed your costs at a realistic customer volume? (Unit economics) |
    | Resources โ†” Activities | Do you have every resource needed to execute every activity? |
    | Partnerships โ†” Risks | Are critical dependencies identified and mitigated? |
    
    **For every "no" answer:** Either fix the block or fundamentally rethink the model. A business model with unresolved inconsistencies will fail predictably.
    
    ---
    
    ## Unit Economics Sanity Check
    
    Before finalizing, calculate these three numbers:
    
    - **CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost):** Total marketing/sales spend รท number of new customers acquired. Target: CAC < 3 months of customer revenue.
    - **LTV (Customer Lifetime Value):** ARPU ร— average customer lifespan in months. Target: LTV > 3ร— CAC.
    - **Payback Period:** CAC รท monthly ARPU. Target: < 12 months.
    
    If unit economics don't work, adjust: raise price, reduce CAC via better channels, or increase retention to extend LTV.
    
    ---
    
    ## When to Revisit
    - Before every major decision (new feature, new market, new pricing).
    - Monthly during the first 6 months of operation.
    - Quarterly thereafter.
    - Whenever a key assumption is proven wrong by real data.
    
    The BMC is a living document. The version you write today will be wrong in 30 days. That's expected. Update it honestly and often.