... where visionaries, game changers, and challengers discuss business models
What does your business model look like? Or what does your personal business model look like? Tim Clark - one of our BMGEN core team members took the initiative to start writing a book about your personal business model together with Alex and Yves.
How would such canvas look like? Who are your business customers? Or who are your private customers? What is your personal purpose in life and how can the personal business model canvas help you making better decisions.
Join the BMYou! Hub at www.businessmodelyou.com where you can contribute, discuss and comment on the stuff what Tim, Alex and Yves are writing. You can also look at the (again) fascinating designs that Alan is producing together with Trisha.
In Amsterdam we ran a pilot on business model you! Here we work with artists, creatives, designers etc. on their personal business model. See some pictures here below. 
Permalink Reply by Tim Clark on April 13, 2011 at 8:10pm 
Permalink Reply by Jelle on April 18, 2011 at 12:12pm Hi Tim,
Thank you! Great to see we are of some help to you and all the other BMyou-ers.
I attended the meeting which Patrick posted the pictures off. That meeting was really great! People did understood that there business was all depending of their own input and directly saw the similarity between their business- and personal model.
This meeting was a try-out and was already great. It was like a pressure cooker. A lot of those people are struggling with their business and we made them see that there isn't a lot of difference between their business and how they would live their lives. I can imagine how a meeting could be if we put context (where are you at right now) and vision (where do you want to go) before the modeling. That sure would be a great eyeopener!
On the hub of Business Model You there is now a great deal of things going on about vision. It would be great if more people joined also to help to get the canvas right. The 9 building blocks are great but in my opinion needs some reviewing to get the right blocks for the personal (working)life one.
So... everybody who is interested in the Business Model Generation, please join and help us out! It would be great to have anonther book what will make a difference :)!
Best wishes, live your dream,
Jelle
Permalink Reply by Tim Clark on April 18, 2011 at 7:19pm
Permalink Reply by Megan Lacey on April 14, 2011 at 8:48pm As the editor of Business Model You!, I thought this explanation might help illuminate the book's ideas and goals:
The vision for BMY is to bring business model thinking to people outside of business: teachers, health care professionals, government employees, and others.
Khushboo Chabria, who joined us yesterday, is a good example of the reader we want to serve. Chabria came to the U.S. at age 11; she's currently a human development and psychology student at the University of California, San Diego. Her long-term goal is to work toward making health care universally available and affordable worldwide. As she recognizes, every health care system in the world—particularly ours here in the U.S.—has huge problems. We believe that one group of people who can benefit from learning to use the business model canvas are those who, like Chabria, hope to devote personal and professional energy to effecting change in troubled or damaged sectors.
BMY starts off by explaining business model thinking and P&L fundamentals in language anyone can understand. We feel this is a viable for readers, again like Chabria, who are likely to complete their studies with little if any business training.
BMY stresses that readers first learn to apply the canvas to their own workplaces before applying it to their personal careers. This way, we are convinced that we can help readers relate their career objectives to greater issues they face both at work and in the larger communities they serve.
Permalink Reply by Erwin Fielt on April 15, 2011 at 2:13pm
Permalink Reply by Marieke Post on April 15, 2011 at 3:36pm Thank you Tim! I feel very much engaged in the subject, so I very much enjoy contributing. But it always rocks to get credits ;)!
Referring to Patricks post...That looks like one great creative setting! Eager to hear Jelle's experience on this :). I just had an inspriring talk with a known -Internet-BusinessAngel- to whom I also spoke about the purpose of BMY. He was very interested. Mostly because he loves to invest in smart people and small companies, and acknowledges the fact that the human being behind the entrepreneur is the company's most valuable asset. Meaning that if he would know of a guideline, coaching service kind of proposition that would optimize the output of the entrepreneur he invested in, he would be very interested in investing in it as part of the investment in a specific company...Lot of investing involved here :).
Business Model You will most likely further evolve in a revolutionary guideline to help people reckognize their true value and effectuate it to a businessmodel that benefits their own ambitions and wishes in life. I know I am enjoying it already :)
Permalink Reply by Tim Clark on April 15, 2011 at 4:00pm
Permalink Reply by Andrea Rodriguez Rojas on December 1, 2011 at 11:46pm I am so curious and excited about this new book, BMY can be an extraordinary tool. I live in Mexico and I want to help entrepreneurs and people to find their real passsion and guidelines in life, I think BMY is a powerfull tool. I still have some doubts making mine, like should I do one for every area in my life (relationships, professional, leisure, financial) or how do you recomend to use the canvas for my personal life?
thak u so mucho!
Permalink Reply by Tim Clark on December 2, 2011 at 1:03am Andrea, so good to hear from you!
I suggest focusing on your professional life first - considering yourself a one-person enterprise, and figuring out who your Customers are and what your VP is.
Depending on how that goes, you may then want to revisit Key Resources (Key Resources means you personally -- your interests, skills/abilities, and personality) to make sure Key Resources harmonize with Key Activities (sometimes they do not) and that Key Activities are driving the appropriate VP. The new book offers lots of specifics about how to do that.
All the best!
Tim
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