The Power of Co-Creation

by Venkat Ramaswamy & Francis Gouillart

Where have you seen co-creation among enterprises and suppliers?

by Blog Moderator, 08/06/10 11:56
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M.Deck's picture
In an article in the Boston Globe on September 5, Jenn Abelson described how Starbucks, Tim Hortons, and Dunkin Donuts are joining forces with their suppliers to create a more sustainable coffee cup. "So now they have decided to join forces. For the first time, Dunkin’, Starbucks, and Tim Hortons are working together to conquer the sustainable container. On Earth Day this April, the competitors convened with cup manufacturers, waste haulers, and municipal officials at a cup summit held at MIT. Since then, they have been sharing prototypes of innovative designs, researching ways to make it financially worthwhile for communities to recycle used coffee cups, and designing a pilot program for a waste-free zone at Faneuil Hall Marketplace where everything would be recycled or composted. The rivals, including Tim Hortons, are working together to persuade owners of paper mills that recycled coffee cups make for good boxes and other products. And that is why collaborating — and offering the recyclers a large volume of cups from all the chains — makes good business sense." It seems like more than just collaboration to me, especially if there is an engagement platform to help this be more than a one shot deal. The idea of co-created sustainability seems compelling.
Albert Sun's picture
Companies such as HP have applied Co-Creation concepts to launch “reverse scorecards” to obtain supplier feedback and continuously improve their own supplier development processes and methods. These companies realize the limitations of current practices and are developing Enterprise Co-Creation capabilities to improve the interactions with their suppliers. These leading companies recognize that many of their suppliers have extensive knowledge and positive experiences from working with other leading customers. 
Albert Sun's picture
Co-creation practices are increasingly common in business situations where an enterprise has a widely dispersed supplier base and the products that are being produced are complex, often R&D intensive. A case example would be Airbus who makes the A380. It has a large network of EU-based strategic partners, each responsible for design, development and production of major assemblies for the plane. Each one of these partners also manages an even deeper and broader network of suppliers. Developing the program management framework to efficiently and effectively manage critical interactions and decisions throughout the design, prototyping and manufacturing lifecycle would require extensive sharing of knowledge and experiences; the methods that Airbus employed to establish their program management framework are essentially the same as those used in Enterprise Co-Creation.

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Co-creation and open innovation

by Venkat Ramaswamy, 10/06/10 12:03
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Following Vijesh Unnikrishnan’s post, does a firm have to do more than just collaborate with external parties for its product innovation to be considered co-creative? The answer is “Yes” – we discuss this more fully in chapter 3 of The Power of Co-Creation on Innovation Co-Creation. Briefly, while popular approaches to opening up innovation, such as crowdsourcing and mass collaboration, aim to tap into talent outside the enterprise to widen the competence base of innovation and bring new perspectives into the innovation process, they often miss a key ingredient: the need to build a compelling engagement experience of collaborative innovation with participants. Crowdsourcing and mass collaboration do indeed involve the building of platforms to engage with external constituencies. Where they fall short, however, is in incorporating the participants’ experiences of interactions on these platforms, and their experiences of enterprise offerings and processes. We have repeatedly found this step to be a hurdle for companies engaging in open innovation, leading to partial or failed attempts. The solution lies in continuously generating insights from the engagement experiences of all participants, and then building the open innovation process with them in a mutually valuable manner. This requires dialogic, transparent, accessible, and reflexive interactions to make the process of open innovation more co-creative. Such innovation co-creation also addresses the challenge of opening up innovation in large, established organizations, by recognizing the experiences of people and talent inside the enterprise as much as those of outsiders. See illustrative examples in the book such as Wacoal (Japan) and Orange Telecom (France).

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Muhammad Saeed's picture
Sir, i have asked a question earlier but unfortunately nobody commented on that. its ok i have another query as i am working these day on two papers. I. The Antecedents of Co-Creation and 2. Customer Satisfaction via co-creation; a novel approach. can you help me out by advising some details and recommending some helpful materials. Thanks
Muhammad Saeed's picture
Sir, i have asked a question earlier but unfortunately nobody commented on that. its ok i have another query as i am working these day on two papers. I. The Antecedents of Co-Creation and 2. Customer Satisfaction via co-creation; a novel approach. can you help me out by advising some details and recommending some helpful materials. Thanks
Muhammad Saeed's picture
I am a Phd Scholar at Iqra University Islamabad, Pakistan. I am also working on Co-Creation and i have found the process one of the novel approaches to the innovation. i would like to share a company's strategy working in Pakistan since 2008 and i would like to ask you senior people whether it is co-creation or not? what can be the antecedents of Co-creation of services? i have a lot of questions in my mind but due to very limited membership with this site, i would be able to write only the above mentioned. ZONG (A china Mobile Company) is working in Pakistan since 2008 and they have launched a package called M9. The best thing this package has is that you have to log on the internet to set the package for you. the company has mass customized some of the items for the ease of its customers but still the consumer has to do a lot more with his desired package. the package is getting famouse and they have captured ver good amount of their customers through advertising campaigns. I would like to ask you people whether we call it a co-creation process or not? Please reply as soon as possible Very Best Regards msaeed20m@yahoo.com 00923215553554
Muhammad Saeed's picture
I am a Phd Scholar at Iqra University Islamabad, Pakistan. I am also working on Co-Creation and i have found the process one of the novel approaches to the innovation. i would like to share a company's strategy working in Pakistan since 2008 and i would like to ask you senior people whether it is co-creation or not? what can be the antecedents of Co-creation of services? i have a lot of questions in my mind but due to very limited membership with this site, i would be able to write only the above mentioned. ZONG (A china Mobile Company) is working in Pakistan since 2008 and they have launched a package called M9. The best thing this package has is that you have to log on the internet to set the package for you. the company has mass customized some of the items for the ease of its customers but still the consumer has to do a lot more with his desired package. the package is getting famouse and they have captured ver good amount of their customers through advertising campaigns. I would like to ask you people whether we call it a co-creation process or not? Please reply as soon as possible Very Best Regards msaeed20m@yahoo.com 00923215553554
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Is there any evidence of emerging co-creation in service industries such as Insurance? If so, what sort of assets are being co-created?
Guest's picture
A nice example of Dell Idea Storm, a often used case for co-creation. 1 month ago I came across a post on Dell Idea Storm of a consumer that argues that Dell is not visibly interacting with consumers on the Idea Storm. Already 410 participants have promoted this post. This shows that you can have a good idea to interact with your community, but should create a long lasting relation with you community else they will go to the competitor. This link shows the post: http://www.ideastorm.com/ideaView?id=087700000000jhaAAA

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Co-creating campaigns and the social contract

by Francis Gouillart, 09/30/10 21:28
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In discussing co-creation among enterprises and public, private, and social entities, Keith Katz asks whether there are examples of co-creation within politics. The answer is yes: a major factor in Barack Obama’s election, for example, was his campaign’s unprecedented use of social media to allow enthusiasts to participate. One columnist wrote, “Most campaigns try desperately to keep control of the candidate's image and message and discourage supporters from improvising on the official party line. Team Obama did the opposite, encouraging campaign creativity with few restrictions,” adding that “In effect, Obama allowed any supporter to be a self-directed campaign manager” (Errol Louis). The campaign website MyBarackObama.org morphed after the election into Change.gov, a website used by the Office of the President-Elect to co-create an initial agenda once the Obama administration took office. Since then, Republicans have taken a page from the Democrats’ playbook and perhaps even surpassed them in the use of social media. Sites such as GOP.org give each party member a personal homepage, supercharge participation, and provide thinking points. And then there’s the Tea Party, which is arguably an exercise in co-creation. Outside the U.S., the governments of Hong Kong, Seoul, South Korea, and Andhra Pradesh, India, have showed how the social contract can be built piece-by-piece by citizens at the local level, rather than mandated from the top. Undoubtedly there are other examples. What cases can you, our readers, share?

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Social media has been a deciding factor in recent elections, and its importance will only grow in the coming years, as TV loses its edge over the internet and other types of medias. création site web
Guest's picture
Social media had a huge impact and it will continue to even as a small charlotte electrician company small businesses will need to engage in these practices to keep up. The times, they are a changin!

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Co-creation across the B2B2B...2C activity chain

by Venkat Ramaswamy, 08/06/10 12:03
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Following Albert Sun’s postings on co-creation with suppliers, this is indeed a vast, untapped opportunity space. As he points out, in situations where an enterprise has a widely dispersed supplier base and the products are complex, there are benefits to extensive sharing of knowledge and experiences. But this is also true of commodity businesses. A good example is ITC e-Choupal, which deals with widely dispersed farmers in India to procure soybean, grain, and other commodities, which it processes further and sells as inputs to, for example, food related businesses. By engaging with farmers in a dialogue about their agricultural practices and enabling them to interact with other farmers as a community and connecting them with a network of agribusiness input providers (fertilizers, pesticides, etc.) and services (e.g., micro-insurance of crops), they have enabled a “supplier ecosystem”.

Further, co-creation can push the envelope even when suppliers are less dispersed and more concentrated, or for that matter even with a single supplier. Consider the logistics business, a complex business involving sophisticated information systems. (Thanks to Shomit Manapure, co-creator of this example.) Ryder is one of many third-party logistics (3PL) companies that rely heavily on Freightliner trucks for its fleet. Freightliner offers software packages that allow fleets to monitor their costs, and has become more involved in their 3PL customers’ quest for cost containment, customers who face cost pressures from fuel usage to maintenance to uneven driving performance. Ryder’s fleet size is over 150,000, and its annual consumption of diesel exceeds 400 million gallons. Freightliner is thus an important enabler for Ryder’s operational success. Managers of Ryder’s Fleet Management Services work closely with Freightliner’s design team, so that the trucks have the desired capabilities Ryder seeks. But Freightliner still lacks insight into the engagement experiences of Ryder’s customers down the chain. Freightliner’s design teams value more visibility into the interaction space across the downstream customer chain, so they can have better insights into end user product usage experiences.

The same is true between Freightliner and its suppliers such as engine manufacturers (e.g., Detroit Diesel). For instance, currently, Freightliner and engine manufacturers collaborate by sharing technology, making joint investments in research, and sharing information. This association primarily focuses on developing engines that comply with the emissions standards enforced by EPA, the specs desired by Freightliner, and the outcome of the engine research by the engine manufacturer. There is considerable potential for making this association more co-creative by elevating the interaction to the next level – i.e., enabling the experiences of the end-user of the trucks to be understood by the engine manufacturer. Since the engine development process is R&D-intensive, deviations can be very expensive. Yet the engine designers have to keep in mind not only their immediate customer such as Freightliner, but also the customers further down the value chain such as Ryder and drivers of the trucks. Many features such as idle time performance, fleet maintenance, carbon footprint, etc. could be incorporated more effectively in the design through insights gained from dialogue about people’s engagement experiences along the entire activity chain.

Freightliner is now working on enabling people inside the engine manufacturer organization and other suppliers as a community to provide repair or diagnosis methods directly to the service centers and the Freightliner call center. Going one step further, Freightliner has realized that its customers like Ryder may not know the best practices for usage and maintenance of Freightliner trucks, so one customer who may have “worst-in-class” uptime or fuel economy has little or no insight into what another customer may be doing to achieve best-in-class operational measures.

Co-creation has the potential to unlock the power of concurrent, collective interactions among multiple stakeholders in the system to generate additional value for each stakeholder, through the experiences of the people involved, over a continuous period of time. It can bring all parties together on the same platform to ease mutual goal alignment, enable richer and more meaningful dialogue, and achieve organization-specific outcomes, as well as joint outcomes. The challenges faced by each managerial function in the respective organizations across the activity system can be very diverse and difficult to understand at an industry or corporate level. The success of co-creation across organizations in the activity chain system relies heavily on enabling co-creative interactions among participants in the system and developing much more personal, participative, interactive relationships that generate new experiences of value to people all along the activity system.

Are there examples that people have seen of co-creation across a B2B2B…2C chain? If so, who drove it? Why? What were the challenges? Lessons learned?

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I am Muhammad Saeed PhD Scholar at a local university in Pakistan. I will just share a company using something like co-creation and would like to ask you people...... is it really co-creation or something very near to that? The Company named ZONG (China Mobile company) working in Pakistan since late 2007 and they have launched a package called M9 Package. To use this package you have to log on to their website and chose the services according to your own useage. They have customized some of its components to facilitate the consumers. I want to quote an example of this company for my paper. Please oblige with your advise and i really need your help in this i have lots and lots of time to read and study all this. I have been reading about LEGO Factory, BMW and other co - creation realted literature and i will appreciate if you have something to share or to correct me or to help me out in this Very Best Regards msaeed20m@yahoo.com
marina21's picture
I think the size and cooperation among a company is critical to whether cocreation will emerge. Rigid power commands and hierarchy do not incite such dynamics. A midterm approach is also vital, most CEO's being short-sighted as far as immediate profits, neglecting the future of the company. Référencement
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I just read an interesting Fortune magazine article on "100 Best Companies to Work For" by Christopher Tkaczyk. Apparently American Express has been employing co-creation principles to improve customer service. The co-creative practice they took was to ask employees what changes they wanted to see. It has resulted in programs where a) the customers determine bonuses, b) flexible scheduling and other employee benefits. One of the primary changes in their customer service approach has been away from "efficiency" based directives such as keeping calls short, to more "relationship/experience development" focus where longer conversations with customers are encouraged. It was noted that it improved service margins by 10%. I can predict more continuing experimentation with Co-Creation as the company realizes benefits in customer and employee satisfaction
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The Power
of Co-Creation

Build it with them to boost growth, productivity, and profits

by Venkat Ramaswamy & Francis Gouillart