This empirical paper presents the results of a detailed case-study investigation of co-creation in radical service
innovation. The rationale for the paper is that detailed interventions must be tracked to offer a realistic account of how
co-creation occurs. This provides a strong empirical contribution to the emerging body of scholars developing the
co-creation paradigm, predominantly characterized by conceptual advances in service-dominant logic. Our focus is on
radical service innovation, which is disruptive in the sector. The overall aim of the paper is to unravel the nature of
microlevel processes of co-creation in radical service innovation.
The study adopts sequential analysis to examine co-creation. Patterns of sequences of actions and interactions
associated with 40 incremental developments, involving multiple actors, are investigated. These co-created innovative
developments underpin the emergence of a radical telematics-based motor insurance service. The findings suggest that
the co-creation path is not simple or uni-faceted, and the paper unravels the nature of complex patterns of activities and
interactions, Our in-depth systematic analysis illuminates a combination approach with two main patterns of
sequences: one dominated by ad-hoc and enduring independent innovation activities by network actors and one
dominated by lead-firm innovation and interaction activity. The findings advance knowledge of the way co-creation
occurs in radical service innovation. The study results suggest that managerial attention be placed to, first, finding ways
to induce independent innovative behavior from network partners and, second, to the development of interaction
mechanisms to foster sharing and visualization of such innovation advances.
History
School
Business and Economics
Department
Business
Citation
PERKS, H., GRUBER, T. and EDVARDSSON, B., 2012. Co‐creation in radical service innovation: a systematic analysis of microlevel processes. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 29(6), pp. 935–951.