Axiata Group, a Malaysia-based telecommunications conglomerate, created a promising new business by using APIs to allow small businesses in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh to use its technology assets to create over 90,000 services. Its experiences can help other incumbents figure out how to tap the potential of their technology assets.
How to Build an Innovation Community
Axiata discovered that developing the software was the easy part. The building and engagement of the small business community was much harder. Three important insights emerged.
Open up the market.
Axiata debuted Ideamart in 2012, but in the first six months few customers accessed the available network features. By interviewing small businesses that had shown interest in getting involved, the team learned that business owners had many ideas for new services, knew how to write the required software, but didn’t know how to market new services to customers.So Axiata taught them how to do it. The team selected five businesses, developed a marketing plan for them, helped them grow the customer base, and showcased their stories to the Ideamart community. Within 18 months, about 1,800 developers participated in the Ideamart and launched new services. To promote and grow the innovation ecosystem, the Axiata team has run hundreds of hackathons and educational programs each year. It has also run events that target women entrepreneurs, which succeeded in increasing their contributions to Axiata from 0.5% of its revenues to 16% in just three years.
Make the technology easy.
Many of the small businesses were unfamiliar with writing software. Realizing this, Axiata created web-based tools and dozens of standard feature templates that made the company’s network features available to all small businesses. No coding is required: A small business can design a service online by simply checking boxes and Axiata generates the software automatically.
Experiment with business models.
Axiata’s traditional business had primarily consisted of voice and data products and services that were customized for different markets. Rodrigo’s team realized Ideamart would require a different approach. It needed to allow customers to create tailored services and had to design new revenue models, which included charging customers a share of revenue, transaction fees (lower than other payment services), and fees for specific services (e.g., helping a pizzeria target 1,000 customers in a product campaign). To operationalize all of these models, the company had to run experiments to ascertain the prices that small businesses would accept, which were usually small as the business did everything themselves.Axiata also learned that it had to change internal business practices. For example, the company had to figure out how to transfer the revenue it collected on behalf of small businesses to them within a few days whereas the typical credit period for large customers ran from 30 to 60 days. It also had to make transaction revenue information available to the small businesses in real time.Yet another lesson: The team had to work in a setting appropriate for its customers. A small team of 10 people in Sri Lanka supports the local Ideamart ecosystem. And when the team was asked to move from a scrappy building to a shiny corporate headquarters in Colombo, its members declined, fearing that small business owners, who often wear shorts and flipflops, would be intimidated by a high-rise office tower.
From Data Pipes to an Innovation Ecosystem
Companies should think about technology assets in their backyard and how much value they leave on the table. Like Axiata, they need to be more creative and experiment with new innovation models to capture their full value.