National Incubation Center Peshawar hosted a curriculum session on the Business Model Canvas for its Cohort 15 founders, with Cynia Ejaz from Telenor leading the session as trainer and subject matter expert. The Business Model Canvas is one of the most widely used strategic tools in the startup world, offering founders a single-page visual framework to map and examine the core components of their business, including value proposition, customer segments, revenue streams, cost structure, key partnerships, and essential operational activities. By bringing in a practitioner from one of the region’s most established telecommunications companies, NIC Peshawar gave its cohort access to a perspective shaped not just by familiarity with the framework in theory but by experience applying strategic thinking within a large-scale, operationally complex organisation.
The session was designed around a specific and recurring challenge in early-stage startup development, which is the tendency of founders to operate on assumptions that feel solid but have never been properly examined or structured. The Business Model Canvas works as an intervention against this tendency because it forces founders to articulate every dimension of their business in explicit terms, making it immediately apparent where the thinking is clear and where it remains vague or untested. For Cohort 15 participants, working through the canvas with Cynia Ejaz’s guidance meant subjecting their business concepts to a structured form of scrutiny that goes beyond pitch preparation and into the actual mechanics of how a business creates, delivers, and captures value.
A particular focus of the session was helping founders develop clarity around their value proposition and customer segments, two elements of the canvas that are often conflated or insufficiently differentiated in early-stage thinking. Understanding precisely what problem a business solves, for whom it solves it, and why that solution is meaningfully better than existing alternatives is foundational to everything else a startup does, from product development to sales to fundraising. Similarly, mapping revenue streams and key operations with greater precision gives founders a clearer picture of where their business model is financially viable and where it carries assumptions that need further validation before resources are committed.
NIC Peshawar runs its cohort curriculum within a broader institutional framework supported by Ignite, the Ministry of Information Technology and Telecommunication, and partners including LMKT, LMKR, Sybrid, Orbit Startups, Institute of Management Sciences, Rehman Medical Institute, CECOS University, and Frontier Platinum. This network of academic institutions, corporate partners, and public sector bodies gives the centre the depth of expertise needed to deliver a curriculum that addresses startup development across its full range of dimensions, of which business model clarity is among the most foundational. The involvement of Telenor through Cynia Ejaz reflects the kind of corporate-incubation collaboration that brings real-world operational experience into what might otherwise remain an academic exercise.
For founders at the cohort stage, the value of a session like this extends well beyond the immediate output of a completed canvas. The discipline of thinking through each component of a business model in structured, explicit terms builds a habit of rigorous strategic thinking that carries forward into every subsequent decision a founder makes. Whether the next step is refining a product, approaching an investor, or entering a new market, founders who have done the work of mapping their business model with genuine depth and honesty are better positioned to communicate their thinking clearly and to identify the gaps before they become expensive mistakes.
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