Companies have recently begun to use the Internet to integrate their customers more actively into various phases of the new product development process. One such strategy involves empowering customers to cooperate in selecting the product concepts to be marketed by the firm. In such scenarios, it is no longer the company but rather its customers who decide democratically which products should be produced. This article discusses the first set of empirical studies that highlight the important psychological consequences of this power shift. The results indicate that customers who are empowered to select the products to be marketed show stronger demand for the underlying products even though they are of identical quality in objective terms (and...
Peer-reviewedSince the internet was first used in the business world, researchers have been asking w...
Purpose – Much of the literature on consumer empowerment focuses on consumers' efforts to regain con...
Companies are increasingly incorporating empowerment into their brand websites (e.g., IKEA’s “Ideas”...
Companies have recently begun to use the Internet to integrate their customers more actively into va...
Companies have recently begun to use the Internet in order to integrate their customers more activel...
Purpose - Arguing that increasing use of information and communication technologies (ICT) is shiftin...
This study aimed to examine to what extent different types of customer empowerment effects consumers...
Past research has shown that consumers who are empowered to select what products a firm offers show ...
Purpose: Arguing that increasing use of information and communication technologies (ICT) is shifting...
This study aimed to examine to what extent different types of customer empowerment effects consumers...
International audienceThe current paper reviews the concept of power and offers a new architecture f...
International audienceThe current paper reviews the concept of power and offers a new architecture f...
The traditional new product development (NPD) model, in which companies are exclusively responsible ...
New technology development, like Web 2.0, allows easy and fast exchanges between consumers and firms...
The traditional new product development (NPD) model, in which companies are exclusively responsible ...
Peer-reviewedSince the internet was first used in the business world, researchers have been asking w...
Purpose – Much of the literature on consumer empowerment focuses on consumers' efforts to regain con...
Companies are increasingly incorporating empowerment into their brand websites (e.g., IKEA’s “Ideas”...
Companies have recently begun to use the Internet to integrate their customers more actively into va...
Companies have recently begun to use the Internet in order to integrate their customers more activel...
Purpose - Arguing that increasing use of information and communication technologies (ICT) is shiftin...
This study aimed to examine to what extent different types of customer empowerment effects consumers...
Past research has shown that consumers who are empowered to select what products a firm offers show ...
Purpose: Arguing that increasing use of information and communication technologies (ICT) is shifting...
This study aimed to examine to what extent different types of customer empowerment effects consumers...
International audienceThe current paper reviews the concept of power and offers a new architecture f...
International audienceThe current paper reviews the concept of power and offers a new architecture f...
The traditional new product development (NPD) model, in which companies are exclusively responsible ...
New technology development, like Web 2.0, allows easy and fast exchanges between consumers and firms...
The traditional new product development (NPD) model, in which companies are exclusively responsible ...
Peer-reviewedSince the internet was first used in the business world, researchers have been asking w...
Purpose – Much of the literature on consumer empowerment focuses on consumers' efforts to regain con...
Companies are increasingly incorporating empowerment into their brand websites (e.g., IKEA’s “Ideas”...