

This article is an excerpt from the Shortform book guide to "Business Model Generation" by Alexander Osterwalder and Yves Pigneur. Shortform has the world's best summaries and analyses of books you should be reading.
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What is the multi-sided platform business model? How do companies that run on an MSP business model create value for their customers?
A multi-sided platform business model (MSP) is where a platform connects several distinct groups of customers with mutual interests. This business model is not a new development—it has existed for centuries. However, it started gaining prominence only in the last decade or so thanks to the advancement of the internet.
Keep reading to learn about the concept of the multi-sided platform business model and its key characteristics.
What Is the Multi-Sided Platform Business Model?
The Multi-sided platform business model enables direct interaction between two or more different but interdependent groups of customers. This pattern is most obvious in a marketplace such as Etsy—this business facilitates exchanges between buyers and sellers, and it requires participation from both parties to offer value and operate successfully. In other words, if sellers stopped listing items on Etsy, customers would see no value in visiting the site. If customers stopped shopping on Etsy, sellers would see no value in listing their products. The more active users that a platform can attract, the more value it can offer to both parties.
In their book Business Model Generation, Osterwalder and Pigneur suggest the following layout for multi-sided platform business models:
Customer Groups | Focus on a minimum of two interdependent customer groups. |
Value Offer | Value comes from the platform—it facilitates efficient and cost-effective interactions between the customer groups. |
Touchpoints | Online methods are usually the most cost-effective. |
Interactions | Online methods are usually the most cost-effective. The aim here is to facilitate interactions between the customer groups. |
Profit Sources | Each group produces a different revenue stream depending on the fees they pay to use the platform (for marketplaces, sellers usually pay subscription fees while buyers have free access). |
Resources | The more customers the platform can provide benefit to, the more of a resource it will become. |
Critical Actions | Develop, maintain, and promote the platform to ensure it meets the needs of individual customer groups. |
Network | Focus on developing partnerships that will make the platform more functional or attractive to all customer groups. |
Expenses | Platform management and development will incur the highest costs. |

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