Providing Client Solutions for Business Ecosystems – IIBE related

Client Solutions for the Integrated Business Ecosysten (IIBE)

I am being asked how I structure my IIBE offering in a commercial structure to offer a clear pathway for potential clients. These are evolving as more modules are coming on stream or currently “in the works” as being validated.

The Key in my approach is to offer A modular, flexible commercial structure enabling tailored pathways for clients at different ecosystem maturity levels.

The designing principle of the Core Commercial Logic

The IIBE commercial model is built as a progressive pathway, allowing clients to enter at different points depending on maturity, ambition, and urgency. All offerings align to four principles:
(1) Low-friction entry points
(2) Capability-building progression
(3) Implementation support
(4) Ongoing advisory and intelligence renewal

Every module is independent but connects into a broader arc of ecosystem capability formation.

Applicable from January 2026, subject to updates and change as portfolio of offers expands.

Read more

A recommended client entry point within the IIBE for Business Ecosystem Building- Ecosystem Exposure

A client entry point recommended within the IIBE Offerings

Within my commercial model for client offerings, provided for Ecosystem building, thinking and design, the value of exploring Tier One as an initial low-cost investment is a great place to start. This extends the understanding of what lies under the IIBE hood, that fires and delivers your Ecosystem ambitions.

It provides some critical insights into how you could position your business for obtaining a competitive advantage at very low investments. You gain a highly valuable return for discovery, understanding and positioning of your Ecosystem.

Firstly Explaining The Overarching Commercial Logic

The IIBE commercial model is built as a progressive pathway, allowing clients to enter at different points depending on maturity, ambition, and urgency. All offerings align to four principles:
(1) Low-friction entry points
(2) Capability-building progression
(3) Implementation support
(4) Ongoing advisory and intelligence renewal

Every module is independent but connects into a broader arc of ecosystem capability formation.

My recommended starting point is:

Read more

 The Urgent Need for Flexibility & Resilience through Energy Ecosystem Alliances.

Applying the IIBE Lens to the Grid Complexity to Trigger Collaboration

I believe there is a strong positioning proposal for forming an Intelligent Integrated Energy Ecosystem to confront the growing Grid Crisis.

Let’s Frame the Challenge– Across Europe, as well as the United States of America and multiple countries or regions globally, electricity grids are reaching structural limits

Increasing renewable penetration, growing electrification, distributed energy resources (DER), and the rise of prosumers have created a coordination problem of enormous complexity.

Read more

An Executive Explainer of The Integrated Interconnected Business Ecosystem (IIBE)

Enabling and Aligning the IIBE Ecosystem approach

I wanted to provide a simple Executive Explainer on the The Integrated Interconnected Business Ecosystem (IIBE)

Background to the IIBE ModelExecutive Summary

The global business environment is entering a decisive shift: from platform-centric models to dynamic, intelligent, interconnected ecosystems. The convergence of AI-driven intelligence, orchestrated collaboration, micro-ecosystem structures, and regenerative purpose is reshaping how value is created, governed, and scaled.

The Integrated Interconnected Business Ecosystem (IIBE) provides the operating logic for this transition. This expainer outlines the key dynamics, design principles, and strategic pathways that will define the Intelligent Business Ecosystem era from 2026 to 2030.

In my opinion and for many others, Ecosystems are the necessary pathway all Business will need to consider and then travel for dealing in a complex, challenging world where closer more deliberate collaboration and co-creation will be needed, to solve more complicated problems that individual organizations will find it increasingly difficult to be able to solve these on their own .

In Seven Explaining parts this provides answers to key questions on the IIBE as an initial background briefing:

Read more

What measurable benefits do organizations gain from IIBE ecosystem adoption?

Clearly with any pioneering framework dealing with a comprehensive approach to Business Ecosystems you are constantly asked what measurable benefits do organizations gain from IIBE adoption Let me brifly summarise what organizations gain by adopting the IIBE (Integrated Interconnected Business Ecosystem) Blueprint. There are a number of real measurable benefits: In summary, IIBE adoption translates … Read more

Resolving Today’s Current Innovator’s Ecosystem Dilemma Progressively

Recognizing the Innovator’s Dilemma with Ecosystems

What would force us to change or radically adjust our existing business trajectory? Can we afford to take another period of uncertainty, what are the risks? Does it make sense to alter our existing Business Models?

At some time it is absolutely right for the C-level to ask! It cuts to the core of the Innovator’s Dilemma applied to organizational transformation.

A terrific book, an Innovation foundational one, was “The Innovator’s Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail,” first published in 1997. It is most probably the best-known work of the Harvard professor and businessman Clayton Christensen. It describes how large incumbent companies lose market share by listening to their customers and providing what appears to be the highest-value products, but new companies that serve low-value customers with poorly developed technology can improve that technology incrementally until it is good enough to quickly take market share from established business (source Wikipedia). Today’ it is so different, anyone can take market share through applying technology thoughtfully.

This concept today faces far more “dilemmas” that can be more widely applied as the “disruptor” has even more “disrupting tools” at their disposal as they search and connect all the “dots” of opportunity that those incumbents will struggle to adopt though legacy or speed of market reaction. “Higher value” needs to be replaced with “Greatest Connecting Value”.

Read more