2017
DOI: 10.1504/ijtm.2017.082357
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Transforming from service providers to solution providers: implications for provider-customer relationships and customer-induced solution innovation

Abstract: Abstract:There is a rich body of literature investigating the integration of customers into innovation processes. The various strands of this literature converge on the notion that integrating customers creates access to use-related knowledge that is needed to better target future customers. In a similar vein, solution selling has emerged as a means to provide solutions that fulfil customers' demands as an alternative to selling products and services to an unknown, anonymous customer. Here, most research adopt… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Perhaps due to these opposing theoretical viewpoints, the pathways by which customer knowledge affects innovation outcomes have not been completely mapped, especially in hybrid offerings contexts, in which the pathways for service-related knowledge likely differ from those for goods-related knowledge (Höber and Schaarschmidt 2017). Therefore, we offer a more unifying innovation-related conceptual framework.…”
Section: Hybrid Offerings Customer Interaction and Innovation Perfomentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Perhaps due to these opposing theoretical viewpoints, the pathways by which customer knowledge affects innovation outcomes have not been completely mapped, especially in hybrid offerings contexts, in which the pathways for service-related knowledge likely differ from those for goods-related knowledge (Höber and Schaarschmidt 2017). Therefore, we offer a more unifying innovation-related conceptual framework.…”
Section: Hybrid Offerings Customer Interaction and Innovation Perfomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, if a manufacturer customizes maintenance services by providing different service-level agreements to different customers, the firm learns how customers react to these service bundles but cannot enlarge its level of technological knowledge. In other words, service-related customer knowledge that is generated through service customization is difficult to harness for goods development (Höber and Schaarschmidt 2017). Thus, service customization might have different effects for goods- and services-related elements of hybrid offerings when goods-centric firms start to build additional service customization capabilities.…”
Section: Conceptual Framework and Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%