This paper extends prior critical discussions of digital prosumption by demonstrating that prosumer reliant online business models represent new ways to valorise consumer labour through the creation of multiple realities whereby digital consumption objects are simultaneously enacted as assests by companies, and as possessions by consumers. We argue that this ontological multiplicity means that consumers’ ‘possession work’ no longer serves to separate these objects from the market sphere, as in prior work. This produces a new form of consumer lock-in, or actually ensnarement as it is consumers’ own efforts to make objects meaningful that keep them in the market, similar to the psychological attachments seen in ‘brand love’, but also incorpor...
Understanding the idea of possession is essential for creating successful products and services, par...
The recent changes regarding user’s role and agency in digital environments, and the consequent infl...
The term prosumer, first introduced by Toffler in the 1980s, has been developed by sociologists in r...
This paper extends prior critical discussions of digital prosumption by demonstrating that prosumer ...
Digital consumption objects (DCOs) highlight limitations to extant theories of possession, including...
Consumer researchers have long striven to understand the role of consumption in the lives of individ...
This theoretical article highlights limitations in the current trend towards dichotomizing full owne...
The objects we consume increasingly exist in digital form, from audiobooks and digital photographs t...
Since the First Industrial Revolution, consumers have been mainly considered as playing a passive ro...
The objects we consume increasingly exist in digital form, from audiobooks and digital photographs t...
The recent evolution of users’ position and agency in digital environments absorbs the attention of ...
The objects we consume increasingly exist in digital form, from audiobooks and digital photographs t...
If digital objects are abundant and ubiquitous, why should consumers pay for, much less collect them...
Copyright © the author(s) 2016. Web 2.0 has placed prosumption at the very centre of economic value ...
The recent changes regarding user’s role and agency in digital environments, and the consequent infl...
Understanding the idea of possession is essential for creating successful products and services, par...
The recent changes regarding user’s role and agency in digital environments, and the consequent infl...
The term prosumer, first introduced by Toffler in the 1980s, has been developed by sociologists in r...
This paper extends prior critical discussions of digital prosumption by demonstrating that prosumer ...
Digital consumption objects (DCOs) highlight limitations to extant theories of possession, including...
Consumer researchers have long striven to understand the role of consumption in the lives of individ...
This theoretical article highlights limitations in the current trend towards dichotomizing full owne...
The objects we consume increasingly exist in digital form, from audiobooks and digital photographs t...
Since the First Industrial Revolution, consumers have been mainly considered as playing a passive ro...
The objects we consume increasingly exist in digital form, from audiobooks and digital photographs t...
The recent evolution of users’ position and agency in digital environments absorbs the attention of ...
The objects we consume increasingly exist in digital form, from audiobooks and digital photographs t...
If digital objects are abundant and ubiquitous, why should consumers pay for, much less collect them...
Copyright © the author(s) 2016. Web 2.0 has placed prosumption at the very centre of economic value ...
The recent changes regarding user’s role and agency in digital environments, and the consequent infl...
Understanding the idea of possession is essential for creating successful products and services, par...
The recent changes regarding user’s role and agency in digital environments, and the consequent infl...
The term prosumer, first introduced by Toffler in the 1980s, has been developed by sociologists in r...