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  1. Collaborative Lifestyles. = one of three forms of Collaborative Consumption identified by Rachel Botsman et al.: It’s not just physical goods that can be shared, swapped, and bartered. People with similar interests are banding together to share and exchange less tangible assets such as time, space, skills, and money.

  2. Definition. Cosmo-Local Production is a methodology for creating value and products and services that are inspired by the following basic rules: it marries the planetary globalization of knowledge, the 'smart' localization of production, and both local and planetary mutualization, i.e. marrying distributed making and global open innovation: 1 ...

    • Introductory Citation
    • Definition
    • Description
    • Characteristics
    • Typology
    • History
    • Discussion
    • Key Books to Read
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    "A quick search on Google Scholar confirms the pattern: from only 23 articles citing ‘co-creation’ in the 1970s, the 1980s delivered a paltry 102, the 1990s a more substantial 658, while the first 9 and a bit years of the 21st Century has already spawned an impressive 3,660."(http://www.promisecorp.com/blog/?p=116)

    "Co-creation is a very broad term with a broad range of applications. We define co-creation as any act of collective creativity that is experienced jointly by two or more people. How is co-creation...

    Non-market Co-creation

    Chris Lawer: "there is also a form of co-creation that is largely independent of markets, where individuals willingly come together to create and share self-generated information, knowledge and content independent of any mechanisms of market exchange. In The Wealth of Networks, Yochai Benkler explores the dimensions and potential of such non-market co-creation / collaboration in some depth. Making the distinction between the two types of co-creation primarily depends on how we define a market...

    Chris Lawer: "In the following twelve statements, I develop a logic that concludes in a concise definition of “co-creation” and how firms may derive competitive advantage by facilitating co-created value. 1. Traditionally, customer value has been defined and differentiated by product quality (Features, Attributes and Benefits - the old Kotlerist FA...

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    From the co-creation blog at http://www.co-creators.co.uk/?page_id=10 1. Value Co-creation: ATM Cash Machine, Airport Check-In More Complex Value Co-creation: "Truffle-tree.co.uk allows customers to adopt a truffle tree in France. Customers who adopt a tree (annual price £145 / $239 / €219 plus an annual maintenance fee) will either receive the truffles from “their” tree or can choose to pool their “harvest” with others to spread the risk of a low harvest. The experience of adopting, and bein...

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    From Fronteer Strategy : "The four types of co-creation 1. Club of experts: A very specific challenge is needing expertise and breakthrough ideas. Contributors are found through a selection process. Quality of input is what counts (e.g. Nokia) 2. Crowd of people: Also known as Crowdsourcing. For any given challenge, there might be a person out there having a genial idea that should be given a podium. It’s the Rule of the big numbers (e.g.Threadless) 3. Coalition of parties: In complex situati...

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    There is a graphic outlining six different ways that corporations are using Co-Creation at http://coinnovative.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/Screen-shot-2010-04-17-at-12.58.40-PM.jpg See: the Co-Creation Landscape, by Jess Charlesworth Full entry has nice graphs and is accompanied by a link to a white paper. 1. Large corporations who engage with a community of advocates to co-create on an ongoing basis. (Lego Mindstorms) 2. Large corporations who call for agencies to submit ideas to the...

    The economic phases up to co-creation, summarized by the Co-Creationblog. 1. Small Scale (Bespoke) Production Before the industrial revolution and the emergence of mass production in the mid 1800s production was small scale. Depending on the type of product, it would be made on a small scale or bespoke. 2. Mass production / Transactional Marketing ...

    Some Issues with Co-Creation

    "Being an emergent discipline co-creation is not only under-defined, it’s also fraught with self-promotion and unproven claims. We think that thinking about co-creation requires a greater focus on the processes, not just outputs. Our analysis highlights the following: 1. The over-reliance on technology platforms as the means of co-creative production. Offline and hybrid techniques receive less attention and are probably underutilised. 2. The centrality of the facilitator / facilitating organi...

    The Five Guiding Principles of a Co-creation strategy

    From Fronteer Strategy: "The five guiding principles in co-creation 1. Inspire participation: Trigger people to join your challenge: open up and show what’s in it for them (e.g. P&G Connect & Develop) 2. Select the very best: You need the best ideas and the best people to deal with today’s complex issues (e.g. Innocentive) 3. Connect creative minds: You have to enable bright people to build on each others ideas, both on- and off-line (e.g. Lego) 4. Share results: Giving back to people - and f...

    Towards Customer-Centric Strategies

    C.K. Prahalad and Venkatram Ramaswamy (essay: The Co-Creation Connection: "The balance of power in value creation is tipping in favor of consumers. How do companies co-create valuable experiences with consumers? The traditional company-centric view says: (1) the consumer is outside the domain of the value chain; (2) the enterprise controls where, when, and how value is added in the value chain; (3) value is created in a series of activities controlled by the enterprise before the point of pur...

    Yochai Benkler, The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom, Cambridge, MA: Yale University Press, 2006.
    Henry Chesbrough, Open Innovation: The New Imperative for Creating and Profiting from Technology, Boston: Harvard Business School Press, 2003.
    James Surowiecki, The Wisdom of Crowds: Why the Many Are Smarter than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies and Nations, New York: Doubleday, 2004.
    Eric von Hippel, Democratizing Innovation, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2005.
  3. 2017年9月19日 · Description. Pat Conaty: " Munibnb. Basically this would be an alliance of local authorities working in partnership with local residents who want to let out rooms. Munibnb would like Airbnb fund the allied update of the apps and platform to promote fair and local trade that would also ensure hotel taxes are paid and lettings are ethical.

  4. 2014年3月28日 · Description. 1. From the Wikipedia: "Ayni (Quechua, also spelled Ayniy or Aini) is a traditional form of mutual help practiced in indigenous communities (ayllu) in the Andes. Ayni means proper relationship. Member of a community help another member for private purposes when support is needed, e.g. in house construction or agricultural works.

  5. The goal—especially in the modern complex and fast-changing environment—is to transition out of our current crisis in economy and environment towards a society that is both knowledge-based and sustainable. The four keywords so central to SLOC—small, local, open and connected—are meaningful because they are, at the same time, visionary ...

  6. PatternDynamics is a simple tool that can be learned by anyone to overcome the challenges posed by complex systems–at any scale. Here’s how it works: The key to complexity is systems thinking; The key to systems thinking is Patterns; and, The key to using Patterns is to form them into a language. Winton’s language of visual patterns to ...

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