2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10100-016-0436-9
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Management science in the era of smart consumer products: challenges and research perspectives

Abstract: Smart products not only provide novel functionalities, but also may establish new business models, markets, or distribution channels, strengthen relationships with consumers, and/or add smart remote services. While many technical obstacles of such products have already been overcome, the broad market dissemination of smart products still poses some vital managerial challenges for decision makers. In this paper, we outline the technical potential and future trends of smart consumer products, discuss economic ch… Show more

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Cited by 79 publications
(69 citation statements)
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References 107 publications
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“…Finally, the 4th IR is characterised by communication among CPSs, which resulted in the IoT; indeed, this 'smartness' can be characterised by the communication and collaboration among autonomous CPSs (Park et al 2017;Porter and Heppelmann 2014). CPSs integrate intelligence-generating technologies, including (i) sensors and/or actuation to either gather data from the environment or to use the data to change the environment, respectively; (ii) computing power for data analysis and iii) optional interfaces to exchange information with the CPS environment (Dawid et al 2017). According to Rüßmann et al (2015), the nine core Industry 4.0 technologies are autonomous robots, simulation, horizontal and vertical system integration, the IoT, cybersecurity, the cloud, additive manufacturing, augmented reality, big data and related analytics.…”
Section: The Industrial Revolutions and Smart Design Engineeringmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Finally, the 4th IR is characterised by communication among CPSs, which resulted in the IoT; indeed, this 'smartness' can be characterised by the communication and collaboration among autonomous CPSs (Park et al 2017;Porter and Heppelmann 2014). CPSs integrate intelligence-generating technologies, including (i) sensors and/or actuation to either gather data from the environment or to use the data to change the environment, respectively; (ii) computing power for data analysis and iii) optional interfaces to exchange information with the CPS environment (Dawid et al 2017). According to Rüßmann et al (2015), the nine core Industry 4.0 technologies are autonomous robots, simulation, horizontal and vertical system integration, the IoT, cybersecurity, the cloud, additive manufacturing, augmented reality, big data and related analytics.…”
Section: The Industrial Revolutions and Smart Design Engineeringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Data showing how the products are used and their actual performance and condition provides insight regarding the infield adequacy according to real-use scenarios, which (1) might result in the identification of opportunities for updating or upgrading the product and (2) would provide an understanding of how customer needs are evolving (Dawid et al 2017;Rodríguez-Mazahua et al 2016). These data also allow companies to determine better and more-tailored maintenance strategies (Gao et al 2015;Windelband 2017).…”
Section: Design For Product-in-use Feedbackmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This compromise depends on the energy and charging requirements of the device, and the structure of the device network. In order for smart cities to become viable investments for government bodies or companies, the cost of building, maintaining, and using long-range wireless infrastructure must be significantly reduced [1].…”
Section: Iot Devices For Smart Citiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The vision of smart cities aims to integrate Internet of Things (IoT) technology to manage and improve urban development, the efficiency of services, and achieve a better quality of life [1]. This is illustrated in Fig.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%