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.
Digital business and management research has expanded rapidly since 2017, reflecting the growing influence of digital transformation, platform ecosystems, analytics capabilities, and artificial intelligence in organizational settings. This expansion has produced a diverse and increasingly fragmented body of scholarship across strategy, information systems, innovation management, marketing, and organizational theory. Although several reviews have clarified specific subfields, the broader intellectual evolution of digital business research remains insufficiently mapped from a bibliometric perspective. This bibliometric review examines the evolution of digital business and management research. Its objective is to identify publication trends, intellectual foundations, thematic clusters, and emerging research fronts across four focal domains: digital strategy, platform-based business models, data analytics, and AI governance. By integrating performance analysis with co-citation and keyword-oriented interpretation, the article provides a structured view of how the field has developed. The analysis indicates that digital business research has moved from broad discussions of digital transformation toward more specialized debates on strategy formation, ecosystem governance, analytics-driven value creation, and responsible AI-enabled management. It also shows that the field is increasingly shaped by interdisciplinary connections between strategic management, information systems, innovation studies, and organizational governance. Five tables summarise the data source, publication trends, keyword clusters, leading contributors, and emerging research gaps. The review concludes that digital business and management research is becoming more mature, but also more complex. The next stage of scholarship requires stronger integration across platform strategy, analytics capabilities, organizational accountability, and AI governance. Future research should move beyond technological adoption narratives and examine how digital technologies reshape authority, coordination, value capture, and managerial responsibility.