Venkat Ramaswamy’s research while affiliated with University of Michigan and other places

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Publications (5)


Co-Creation Experiences: The Next Practice in Value Creation
  • Article

December 2004

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7,669 Reads

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6,573 Citations

Journal of Interactive Marketing

C. K. Prahalad

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Venkat Ramaswamy

Consumers today have more choices of products and services than ever before, but they seem dissatisfied. Firms invest in greater product variety but are less able to differentiate themselves. Growth and value creation have become the dominant themes for managers. In this paper, we explain this paradox. The meaning of value and the process of value creation are rapidly shifting from a product- and firm-centric view to personalized consumer experiences. Informed, networked, empowered, and active consumers are increasingly co-creating value with the firm. The interaction between the firm and the consumer is becoming the locus of value creation and value extraction. As value shifts to experiences, the market is becoming a forum for conversation and interactions between consumers, consumer communities, and firms. It is this dialogue, access, transparency, and understanding of risk-benefits that is central to the next practice in value creation.


Co-Creating Unique Value With Customers

June 2004

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5,680 Reads

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4,137 Citations

Strategy and Leadership

The traditional system of company-centric value creation (that has served us so well over the past 100 years) is becoming obsolete. Leaders now need a new frame of reference for value creation. In the emergent economy, competition will center on personalized co-creation experiences, resulting in value that is truly unique to each individual. The authors see a new frontier in value creation emerging, replete with fresh opportunities. In this new frontier the role of the consumer has changed from isolated to connected, from unaware to informed, from passive to active. As a result, companies can no longer act autonomously, designing products, developing production processes, crafting marketing messages, and controlling sales channels with little or no interference from consumers. Armed with new tools and dissatisfied with available choices, consumers want to interact with firms and thereby co-create value. The use of interaction as a basis for co-creation is at the crux of our emerging reality. The co-creation experience of the consumer becomes the very basis of value. The authors offer a DART model for managing co-creation of value processes.


Firms’ Manager as Consumer – The Essence of Agility

February 2003

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32 Reads

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5 Citations

The concept of an "average" manager is inappropriate in the world of agility, where local conditions constantly change and managers have to act fast. The authors believe that this is the new challenge to both line managers and IT organizations. In this cut-throat, weakness-revealing economy, companies can no longer afford to simply sweep the problem of managerial procrastination under the rug. So the case for agility is obvious. The relevant questions, are: What are the building blocks of agility in an organization? Can agility exist without a managerial context? And, perhaps most importantly, can existing IT infrastructures support organizational agility?


Co-Opting Customer Competence

January 2000

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5,192 Reads

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2,813 Citations

Harvard Business Review

Major business trends such as deregulation, globalization, technological convergence, and the rapid evolution of the Internet have transformed the roles that companies play in their dealings with other companies. Business practitioners and scholars talk about alliances, networks, and collaboration among companies. But managers and researchers have largely ignored the agent that is most dramatically transforming the industrial system as we know it: the consumer. In a market in which technology enabled consumers can now engage themselves in an active dialogue with manufacturers-a dialogue that customers can control - companies have to recognize that the customer is becoming a partner in creating value. In this article, authors C.K. Prahalad and Venkatram Ramaswamy demonstrate how the shifting role of the consumer affects the notion of it company's core competencies. Where previously, businesses learned to draw on the competencies and resources of their business partners and suppliers to compete effectively, they must now include consumers as part of the extended enterprise, the authors say. Harnessing those customer competencies won't be easy. At a minimum, managers must come to grips with four fundamental realities in co-opting customer competence: they have to engage their customers in an active, explicit, and ongoing dialogue; mobilize communities of customers; manage customer diversity; and engage customers in cocreating personalized experiences. Companies will also need to revise some of the traditional mechanisms of the marketplace - pricing and billing systems, for instance-to account for their customers' new role.


Citations (4)


... First, this study contributes to the expansion of value co-creation theory. Since the concept of value co-creation was introduced by Prahalad and Ramaswamy (2000), the role of customers within the industrial value chain has become increasingly prominent. Recent international studies have started to explore value co-creation in sports tourism, particularly in countries like the United States and the United Kingdom. ...

Reference:

Value Co-Creation in Participatory Sports Event Tourism: A Mixed Methods Study
Co-Opting Customer Competence
  • Citing Article
  • January 2000

Harvard Business Review

... Retailers embrace new digital technologies to offer consumer services that increase consumer engagement with their marketing content (Prahalad and Ramaswamy, 2004;Rauschnabel, 2018;Thakur, 2016). Augmented reality (AR) apps, as one of the new technologies, allow consumers to virtually evaluate digital marketing content and overlay it on their physical environment, such as their home, in real time (Aslam and Davis, 2023;Georgiou and Kyza, 2017). ...

Co-Creating Unique Value With Customers
  • Citing Article
  • June 2004

Strategy and Leadership

... H5: susceptibility to informational influence (sII) influences the PV of livestream shopping. according to Zhu et al. (2022), co-creation is a participatory and interactive customer experience that challenges the traditional notion of companies as sole value creators (Prahalad & ramaswamy, 2004). co-creation involves active collaboration between companies or service/product providers and customers to create shared experiences and value (oyner & Korelina, 2016;Zhang et al., 2018). ...

Co-Creation Experiences: The Next Practice in Value Creation
  • Citing Article
  • December 2004

Journal of Interactive Marketing

... • Delivery speed • Speed to decision making • Speed of data access In the quality improvement area, several criteria can be used, such as: • Data transparency: represents the level of data quality and availability to IS users. It refers, moreover, to the level of alignment between business needs and IT needs for data business intelligence [71]. • Products value addition • Quality over product life • User satisfaction A major concern of business is the level of IT costs effectiveness, which can be measured through criteria, such as, attainment of unit cost targets and IT costs charged back to the business unit [96]. ...

Firms’ Manager as Consumer – The Essence of Agility
  • Citing Article
  • February 2003