Creativity and innovation are important drivers of economic welfare and growth in contemporary societies. Collaborating with and learning from users in the early phase of the innovation process has been considered a successful approach to stimulate those creative sparks for organizations. However, the idea of users as innovators has also invoked critical responses especially in the context of innovations that are discontinuous to dominant designs. Martin Hewing and co-author Katharina Hölzle explore the potential that can arise through collaboration with potential users who are not yet users. Those users at the peripheries are perceived to contribute more novel information, by which they better reflect shifts in needs and behavior than current users at the center. ContentsCo-Creation with Users at the Edges of MarketsInnovative Ideas through Collaboration with Potential UsersThe Playful Ingenuity of Potential Users in Collaboration: Enriched Compensation and Improvisation Target GroupsResearchers and students in the field of creative problem-solving and innovation managementManagers and practitioners involved inthe early stages of innovation management The AuthorDr.Martin Hewing is a User Experience Researcher and an externalresearch associate at the department of Innovation Management & Entrepreneurship at Universität Potsdam
Creativity and innovation are important drivers of economic welfare and growth in contemporary societies. Collaborating with and learning from users in the early phase of the innovation process has been considered a successful approach to stimulate those creative sparks for organizations. However, the idea of users as innovators has also invoked critical responses especially in the context of innovations that are discontinuous to dominant designs. Martin Hewing and co-author Katharina Hölzle explore the potential that can arise through collaboration with potential users who are not yet users. Those users at the peripheries are perceived to contribute more novel information, by which they better reflect shifts in needs and behavior than current users at the center.
Study in the field of economic science Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Martin Hewing
Co-Creation Creative Problem-Solving Experimental Design Innovation User Driven Innovation