Research Article
Consumer integration in sustainable product development
Article first published online: 20 APR 2007
DOI: 10.1002/bse.577
Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. and ERP Environment
Issue
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Business Strategy and the Environment
Special Issue: Integration and Communication - A Clear Route to Sustainability? Guest Editor: Frances Hines, Cardiff University, UK.
Volume 16, Issue 5, pages 322–338, July 2007
Additional Information
How to Cite
Hoffmann, E. (2007), Consumer integration in sustainable product development. Bus. Strat. Env., 16: 322–338. doi: 10.1002/bse.577
Publication History
- Issue published online: 5 JUN 2007
- Article first published online: 20 APR 2007
- Manuscript Accepted: 6 FEB 2007
- Manuscript Revised: 10 DEC 2006
- Manuscript Received: 30 NOV 2006
- Abstract
- References
- Cited By
Keywords:
- innovation;
- consumer;
- user;
- product development;
- boundary spanning;
- organizational learning;
- sustainability;
- user involvement;
- participation;
- co-operation
Abstract
Changes in production and consumption patterns are a crucial element of the sustainability agenda. Communication between product developers and users, and user integration in product development, can serve as a means for organizational as well as individual learning processes, resulting in sustainable product development. Recent approaches to innovation research describe the role of users in the innovation process as essential. However, conventional market research gives consumers a passive role as a mere object of research instead of considering them as possible innovators themselves. Improved methods, such as INNOCOPE (innovating through consumer-integrated product development), tested in this study with a cycle manufacturer and resulting in a new product, a pedelec, are needed for effective communication, activating consumers and enabling them to promote sustainability goals. Through co-operative product development processes key factors facilitating and obstructing the adoption of sustainable innovations may be identified. Such processes can enhance the emergence and diffusion of sustainable product innovations and different forms and bodies of knowledge can be combined. Integrating users' contextual everyday knowledge of the product with the technical knowledge of companies may lead to mutual learning, technical innovations and changes in consumer behaviour. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment.

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