Fundamental Analysis Lesson 2 – Understanding Business Models

Before looking at numbers, ratios, or share prices, a long-term investor must answer one basic question:

How does this company actually make money?

This lesson focuses on understanding business models — the core engine that drives a company’s revenue, profits, and long-term survival.


What Is a Business Model?

A business model explains:

  • What the company sells
  • Who its customers are
  • How it earns revenue
  • What major costs it incurs
  • Why customers choose it over competitors

📌 In simple terms: A business model is the company’s money-making blueprint.


Why Business Models Matter to Investors

Two companies can have similar profits today but very different futures.

A strong business model helps a company:

  • Generate consistent revenue
  • Maintain pricing power
  • Survive competition and downturns
  • Grow without excessive risk

📌 Investor insight:

Great companies fail when their business models break.


Common Types of Business Models (With Simple Examples)

1️⃣ Product-Based Model

Company makes and sells physical products.

Examples:

  • FMCG companies (soaps, food, beverages)
  • Automobile manufacturers

Key questions for investors:

  • Is demand recurring?
  • Are margins stable?
  • How strong is the brand?

2️⃣ Service-Based Model

Company earns by providing services.

Examples:

  • IT services
  • Consulting firms

Key questions:

  • How dependent is revenue on employees?
  • Can the business scale easily?

3️⃣ Subscription Model

Customers pay regularly (monthly/annually).

Examples:

  • Streaming platforms
  • Software companies

Key questions:

  • Customer retention rate
  • Pricing power
  • Switching costs

4️⃣ Platform / Marketplace Model

Company connects buyers and sellers.

Examples:

  • E-commerce platforms
  • Payment platforms

Key questions:

  • Network effects
  • User growth
  • Monetization strength

Cost Structure: The Other Side of the Model

Understanding costs is as important as understanding revenue.

Look at:

  • Fixed costs (rent, salaries)
  • Variable costs (raw materials, logistics)
  • Operating leverage

📌 Investor mindset:

A business that controls costs well survives tough times.


Scalability: Can the Business Grow Profitably?

Ask:

  • Can revenue grow faster than costs?
  • Does growth require heavy capital every time?

High-quality businesses often show:

  • Rising margins over time
  • Better efficiency as scale increases

Simple Red Flags in Business Models

Be cautious if a company:

  • Depends on heavy discounts to sell
  • Has unclear revenue sources
  • Relies only on one customer or product
  • Faces easy replacement by competitors

📌 Rule of thumb: If you cannot explain the business model in simple words, avoid investing.


Real-Life Thinking Exercise

Before investing in any company, ask:

  1. What problem does this company solve?
  2. Why do customers pay for it?
  3. How does the company earn repeatedly?
  4. What could disrupt this model in 5–10 years?

Key Takeaways

  • Business models are the foundation of fundamental analysis
  • Strong models create predictable, sustainable earnings
  • Numbers matter only after understanding the business
  • Simplicity and clarity beat complexity

What’s Next

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