Open Society and Soros Foundation
about usinitiativesgrants and scholarshipsresource centernewsroom
Publications
OpenBusiness Guide v1.0

October 2007

OpenBusiness.cc, an international initiative with partners in Brazil, South Africa, and the UK, and supported by the Open Society Institute, International Development Research Centre Canada, Ford Foundation, and Arts Council England, has collected examples of new business models and processes that focus on:

  • lowering the costs of market entry for individuals by providing tools or services, that "open" up traditional business boundaries using the Internet;
  • sharing information for free using alternative open copyright models, while exploring new revenue models;
  • giving substantial parts of content away for free while creating derivative revenue streams;
  • operate organizationally like Open Source software production, but translate the model to services (finance, or film or music production).

The guide represents a first attempt to summarize a trend towards more "open" ways to run a business, touching upon concepts, mechanisms and principles such
as web 2.0, peer to peer economics, social networking, crowd sourcing, open innovation, peer production, non-monetary incentives, free culture, Creative Commons and Free and Open Source Software.

The first version of the guide combines theoretical background with practical recommendations. Near the end of the guide readers can find strategic advice and some selected case studies. In the spirit of the project the guide is available as a Wiki so it can be improved and become a growing resource for "open entrepreneurship."

The guide can be found at http://wiki.icommons.org/index.php/The_OpenBusiness_Guide.

back to the top of the page
share  print  print

About Us  |  Initiatives  |  Grants, Scholarships & Fellowships  |  Resource Center  |  Newsroom  |  Site Map  |  About this Site  |  Contact

©2008 Open Society Institute. All rights reserved.

400 West 59th Street  |  New York, NY 10019, U.S.A.  |  Tel 1-212-548-0600

OSI-New York, OSI-Budapest, OSF-London, OSI-Paris and OSI-Brussels are separate organizations that operate independently
yet cooperate informally with each other. This website, a joint presentation, is intended to promote each organization’s interests.