service systems and value modeling from an appreciative system perspective

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Gil Regev and Alain Wegmann

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Service Systems and Value Modeling from an Appreciative System Perspective

Gil Regev (EPFL, Itecor), Olivier Hayard (Itecor), Alain Wegmann (EPFL)

1

Basic Question

!   How do people and organizations value a service?

2

Example: iPod and iTunes

3

Source: Wikipedia

Source: Wikipedia

Why did my kids buy iPods?

Service System and Value in Service Science

!   Service Systems are interactive configurations of mutual exchange in which value is created collaboratively.

!   Value is “an improvement in system well-being” and is measured in terms of “system’s adaptiveness or ability to fit in its environment.”

4

Value in Exchange and Value in Use

!   Value in Exchange !   depends on the customer’s ability to use the product, resell it or

transfer it to others

!   Value in Use !   co-creation of value jointly by the supplier and the customer

5

Value and Survival in Service Science

!   “Value depends on the capabilities a system has to survive and accomplish other goals in its environment.”

!   “When value creation is seen from a service systems perspective, the producer–consumer distinction disappears and all participants contribute to the creation of value for themselves and for others.”

!   Source: Vargo, S.L., Maglio, P.P., Akaka, M.A.: On value and value co-creation: A service systems and service logic perspective. European Management Journal 26:3, 145–152, (2008)

6

Sir Geoffrey Vickers

7

Stability vs. Change

Regulation vs. Goals

Appreciative System

Source: Wikipedia

Vickers’s Appreciative System

!   Readiness to See

!   Readiness to Value

!   Readiness to Act

8

Action Judgment

Reality Judgment

Value Judgment

Regulatedprocess

Comparison andgeneration of

correction

output

interpreted statecorrection

input

desired state

!   Observer defines identity (survival) of system

Systems and Survival

9

Observer

Norms

Tacit Norms

Entities

Universe of Discourse

Reality

System Processes

10

Environment

System

Service Relations (external)

Metabolic Relations (internal)

Example: iPod and iTunes

11

Source: Wikipedia

Source: Wikipedia

Why did my kids buy iPods?

iPod Value in Exchange

12

Readiness to Value

Readiness to See

Metabolic Relations

iPod Value in Exchange

13

Readiness to Value

Readiness to See

Metabolic Relations

iPod Value in Use

14

iPod Value in Use

15

Future Steps

!   Combine Value in Exchange and Value in Use !   Capiltalize on their combination

!   Model Readiness to Act !   Comparison between alternatives

!   Extend the Readiness to See, Value and Act !   Innovation and creativity

16

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