| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10496176 | Industrial Marketing Management | 2010 | 9 Pages | 
Abstract
												This paper takes an empirical starting point in a claim that Biacore, a pioneering Swedish producer of affinity biosensors, was “in the enviable position of creating its own market” (Abelin, 1997). An in-depth case study traces how Biacore undertook segmentation activities while shaping the market for its new product technology, affinity biosensors. This involved stabilising the modes of exchange with customers, the product and the identity of the company. The efforts of Biacore highlight a constructive dimension of market segmentation that hitherto has received little attention. Rather than a process of describing, deciding and taking action, Biacore engaged in the gradual construction of market segments through an interactive and iterative process involving close collaboration with early users. Simultaneously, the market for the new technology gained shaped. Thus, the paper reports a 'markets from networks' story illustrating how the practice of segmenting a market may have consequences for that market.
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											Authors
												Debbie Harrison, Hans Kjellberg, 
											