Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > [Re]-imagining vision and values

Electronic data

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

[Re]-imagining vision and values: design as a driver for value creation in the Internet of Things

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

[Re]-imagining vision and values: design as a driver for value creation in the Internet of Things. / Lee, Boyeun; Cooper, Rachel; Hands, David James et al.
2018.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Author

Bibtex

@conference{984a34c8cc4048a2b38f4f3d91fe2cd3,
title = "[Re]-imagining vision and values: design as a driver for value creation in the Internet of Things",
abstract = "In digital age in which a myriad of products is becoming connected through the Internet of Things (IoT), new business opportunities and challenges arise for organisations regardless of size and product/service offerings. The traits of digital technology and digital economy results in not only profound changes in the ways organisations create value and develop their IoT products and services, but also emergent and dynamic business models. It also opens new opportunities in terms of how organisations increase turnover, thus conventional theories and practices of how value is created in the design and development process is constantly being challenged. Although, academics and practitioners often critically debate these emergent opportunities and challenges to the adoption of the {\textquoteleft}Internet of Things{\textquoteright}, there is a paucity of established academic theories and industry practices to support and re-think traditional processes of product design and development to meet current needs and potential commercial opportunities in the era of IoT. This paper will offer a critical examination on how design processes have evolved with regard to the differences in value creation between goods-dominant logic and the service-dominant logic in order to identify an emergent design process feasible for IoT product and service development. In addition, factors that affect value creation, and design and development process in the IoT are reviewed. It concludes by offering key insights and observations as to where design can contribute to value creation in the internet of things.",
author = "Boyeun Lee and Rachel Cooper and Hands, {David James} and Paul Coulton",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1049/cp.2018.0023",
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - [Re]-imagining vision and values

T2 - design as a driver for value creation in the Internet of Things

AU - Lee, Boyeun

AU - Cooper, Rachel

AU - Hands, David James

AU - Coulton, Paul

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - In digital age in which a myriad of products is becoming connected through the Internet of Things (IoT), new business opportunities and challenges arise for organisations regardless of size and product/service offerings. The traits of digital technology and digital economy results in not only profound changes in the ways organisations create value and develop their IoT products and services, but also emergent and dynamic business models. It also opens new opportunities in terms of how organisations increase turnover, thus conventional theories and practices of how value is created in the design and development process is constantly being challenged. Although, academics and practitioners often critically debate these emergent opportunities and challenges to the adoption of the ‘Internet of Things’, there is a paucity of established academic theories and industry practices to support and re-think traditional processes of product design and development to meet current needs and potential commercial opportunities in the era of IoT. This paper will offer a critical examination on how design processes have evolved with regard to the differences in value creation between goods-dominant logic and the service-dominant logic in order to identify an emergent design process feasible for IoT product and service development. In addition, factors that affect value creation, and design and development process in the IoT are reviewed. It concludes by offering key insights and observations as to where design can contribute to value creation in the internet of things.

AB - In digital age in which a myriad of products is becoming connected through the Internet of Things (IoT), new business opportunities and challenges arise for organisations regardless of size and product/service offerings. The traits of digital technology and digital economy results in not only profound changes in the ways organisations create value and develop their IoT products and services, but also emergent and dynamic business models. It also opens new opportunities in terms of how organisations increase turnover, thus conventional theories and practices of how value is created in the design and development process is constantly being challenged. Although, academics and practitioners often critically debate these emergent opportunities and challenges to the adoption of the ‘Internet of Things’, there is a paucity of established academic theories and industry practices to support and re-think traditional processes of product design and development to meet current needs and potential commercial opportunities in the era of IoT. This paper will offer a critical examination on how design processes have evolved with regard to the differences in value creation between goods-dominant logic and the service-dominant logic in order to identify an emergent design process feasible for IoT product and service development. In addition, factors that affect value creation, and design and development process in the IoT are reviewed. It concludes by offering key insights and observations as to where design can contribute to value creation in the internet of things.

U2 - 10.1049/cp.2018.0023

DO - 10.1049/cp.2018.0023

M3 - Conference paper

ER -