Platform ecosystems represent a distinctive organizational form in the digital economy, characterized by interdependent actors coordinated through digital infrastructure. This systematic integrative review synthesizes peer-reviewed studies to examine three core themes in management scholarship: governance structures, strategic leadership, and innovation dynamics. Drawing on targeted literature from leading journals, the analysis reveals how platform owners balance openness and control to sustain generativity while mitigating power asymmetries. Strategic leadership emerges as a dynamic capability for ecosystem orchestration, enabling platform firms to align complementor incentives and drive value co-creation. Innovation processes are shown to depend on complementor participation, selective promotion of complements, and evolving coordination mechanisms that address tensions between autonomy and collective performance. The review traces the evolution of research from an early emphasis on governance mechanisms to a later focus on leadership, power dynamics, and the ecosystem lifecycle. An original synthesis model—the Platform Ecosystem Governance-Leadership-Innovation Synthesis Model—is introduced to integrate fragmented insights into five interconnected layers. By classifying the literature thematically and highlighting persistent tensions, this review provides a unified architecture for future platform research and offers actionable insights for ecosystem managers.
The digital transformation of the economy has fundamentally altered the logic of business models, shifting the focus from linear, firm-centric value chains to complex, networked architectures. This narrative review synthesizes contemporary literature to conceptualize digital business models, framing the interplay between digitalization and business model design. We explore how platforms, data, and ecosystem-based value creation have become the central pillars of modern business strategy. The review identifies three core architectural shifts: the emergence of platform-based models that orchestrate value exchange, the rise of data as a primary resource for value propositions and monetization, and the transition from dyadic firm-customer relationships to multi-actor ecosystems. We analyze inherent tensions in these models, such as balancing openness with control and scalability with value capture, which present novel strategic challenges. By integrating findings from key references, this article clarifies the conceptual landscape of digital business models and highlights a departure from traditional configurations. We conclude by outlining implications for strategic management and proposing future research directions to address conceptual fragmentation and dynamic governance issues in digital business model innovation.