Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
508813 | Computers in Industry | 2015 | 13 Pages |
•Combination of web search techniques, principal component, correlation, K-means cluster and self-organizing map analysis.•A business intelligence method using online textual data to generate insights about firms’ involvement in co-creation and product-enabled services.•A strong relationship between firms’ degree of involvement in co-creation activities, the articulation of their service value attributes and the perception of their innovativeness.•Stronger customer integration through appropriate product-enabled services could enhance the benefits for both customers and firms.•Open source software-driven firms are an example of best practices in terms of co-creation and new product-enabled service development.
In this paper we introduce a method that combines principal component analysis, correlation analysis, K-means clustering and self organizing maps for the quantitative semantic analysis of textual data focusing on the relationship between firms’ co-creation activities, the perception of their innovation and the articulation of the attributes of their product-enabled services. Principal component analysis was used to identify the components of firms’ value co-creation activities and service value attributes; correlation analysis was used to examine the relationship between the degree of involvement in specific co-creation activities, the online articulation of firms’ service value attributes and the perception of their innovativeness. K-means and self organizing map (SOM) are used to cluster firms with regards to their involvement in co-creation and new service development, and, additionally, as complementary tools for studying the relationship between co-creation and new service development.The results show that, first, there is a statistically significant relationship between firms’ degree of involvement in co-creation activities and the degree of articulation of their service value attributes; second, the relationship should be considered within the context of firms’ innovation activities; third, OS Software-driven firms are the best example in terms of co-creation and new product-enabled service development, i.e. the collaborative principles built in their customer participation platforms should be adopted by other (non-software) firms interested in enhancing their innovation capacity through involvement in co-creation and new product-enabled service development.
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