A service science perspective on business model innovation |
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Authors: | Paul P. Maglio Jim Spohrer |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of California, Merced, United States;2. IBM Research, Almaden, 650 Harry Rd, San Jose, CA 95120, United States |
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Abstract: | Using four basic principles of service science, we systematically explore value-proposition design as one type of business model innovation. Service science combines organization and human understanding with business and technological understanding to categorize and explain service systems, including how they interact and evolve to cocreate value. Our goal is to apply a scientific approach to advance design and innovation in service systems. Our foundation is service-dominant logic, which provides perspective, vocabulary, and assumptions on which to build a theory. Our basic theoretical construct is the service system, entities that are dynamic configurations of four kinds of resources. Our core principles center on the way value is computed within and among entities, how interaction is based on access to resources and their capabilities, and on how value computation and interaction depend on symbol processing and language guided by mutually agreed-to value propositions. In this context, service science can inform and accelerate value-proposition design by systematizing the search for adaptive advantages that improve existing offerings, create new offerings, or reconfigure the value-creating ecosystem. |
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Keywords: | Service science Business model innovation Value proposition design IT outsourcing |
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