TY - JOUR
T1 - Moving towards the Incomplete
T2 - A Research Agenda for the Development of Future Products in the Digital Economy
AU - Davies, Philip
AU - Ng, Irene
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - Pervasive digital technologies are advancing at an exponential rate, changing the nature of products and services as we know them. Firms could now serve context through the delivery of digitally enabled offerings. Serving context requires the product to be designed as incomplete, allowing the consumers to complete the offering in context through the application of their own resources. An offering may be digitised in such a way that functionality can be added (reprogrammed) even after the product has been transferred to the customer. In that respect, the product will remain “incomplete” through life [1]. An incomplete product can be tailored to the customers’ context to obtain a better “fit” with its environment and what the customer wants to achieve. Value co-creation occurs in context; empowering the consumer with the ability to dynamically reconfigure the offering the benefit is potentially increased. Incomplete products skew the trade-off between standardisation and personalisation. In the case of the iPhone ®, the boundary of standardisation is drawn at the hardware level where as the boundary for personalisation is drawn at the digital app layer, allowing firms to derive scale economies whilst the customer is achieves high levels of personalisation. This paper proposes three areas need a completely need study. First, it explores product and service architectures and the role of modularity within incomplete products. Second, it aims to conceptualize a meaning for indefinite postponement, a new concept enabled by incomplete products and digital technologies. The final area for discussion is transaction boundaries.
AB - Pervasive digital technologies are advancing at an exponential rate, changing the nature of products and services as we know them. Firms could now serve context through the delivery of digitally enabled offerings. Serving context requires the product to be designed as incomplete, allowing the consumers to complete the offering in context through the application of their own resources. An offering may be digitised in such a way that functionality can be added (reprogrammed) even after the product has been transferred to the customer. In that respect, the product will remain “incomplete” through life [1]. An incomplete product can be tailored to the customers’ context to obtain a better “fit” with its environment and what the customer wants to achieve. Value co-creation occurs in context; empowering the consumer with the ability to dynamically reconfigure the offering the benefit is potentially increased. Incomplete products skew the trade-off between standardisation and personalisation. In the case of the iPhone ®, the boundary of standardisation is drawn at the hardware level where as the boundary for personalisation is drawn at the digital app layer, allowing firms to derive scale economies whilst the customer is achieves high levels of personalisation. This paper proposes three areas need a completely need study. First, it explores product and service architectures and the role of modularity within incomplete products. Second, it aims to conceptualize a meaning for indefinite postponement, a new concept enabled by incomplete products and digital technologies. The final area for discussion is transaction boundaries.
KW - Incomplete product
KW - Modularity
KW - Pervasive digital technologies
KW - Value cocreation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85009929091&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.promfg.2015.07.498
DO - 10.1016/j.promfg.2015.07.498
M3 - Article (Academic Journal)
AN - SCOPUS:85009929091
SN - 2351-9789
VL - 3
SP - 3368
EP - 3374
JO - Procedia Manufacturing
JF - Procedia Manufacturing
ER -