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New Business for Old Europe
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New Business for Old Europe

Product-Service Development, Competitiveness and Sustainability 

Edited by Arnold Tukker, TNO, the Netherlands, and Ursula Tischner, econcept, Germany
10% discount on this title
September 2006   479 pp   234 x 156 mm  
hardback   ISBN 978-1-874719-92-2   £35.00  


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Companies need to switch their focus to selling need fulfilment, satisfaction, or experiences. In other words, selling integrated solutions or product-services. In a losing battle to compete purely on price with emerging and low-cost economies such as China, product-services can mean new business for old Europe.

 

Buy this title together with Eco-service Development: Reinventing Supply and Demand in the European Union and save £35/€57.50/$65.

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Selling products used to be the standard way of doing business. Traditionally, it is left to the user to transform the purchase of a product into something that fulfils effectively a final-user need. Today, two streams of research - business management and sustainability — normally with very distinct perspectives on the world, have surprisingly converged to form a common conclusion: selling products is old-fashioned business. Companies should switch their focus to selling need fulfilment, satisfaction, or experiences. Or, in other words, selling integrated solutions or product-services.

The business management literature argues that, by focusing on the integrated, final-client needs, and delivering integrated solutions fulfilling these needs, companies will be able to improve their position in the value chain, enhance added value of their offering, and improve their innovation potential. In a business world where many products are becoming equally well-performing commodities, this strategy is one of the ways to avoid a sheer competition on price — a type of competition that Europe never can win with emerging and low-cost economies such as China. In that sense, product-services can mean new business for old Europe.

The sustainability knowledge stream argues that need-focused solutions could be inherently more sustainable than products. Product-services could offer the value of use instead of the product itself and decrease the environmental load in two ways. First, companies offering the service would have all the incentives to make the (product-)system efficient, as they get paid by the result. Second, consumers would be encouraged to alter their behaviour as they gain insight into all the costs involved with the use

Until today, the connections and interchange between the two research streams have been quite limited. The question of whether product-services truly are the avenue to a sustainable world is still under discussion. This book aims to develop a systematic view on this issue.

The potential of product-services to enhance competitiveness and contribute to sustainable development prompted the EU to invest heavily in the theme under the EU's 5th Framework Programme (FP5; 1997-2002). A variety of research and development projects in the field were supported under the umbrella of the Sustainable Product Development Network (SusProNet). These included MEPSS (Methodology Product Service Systems); Home Services; HiCS (Highly Customerised Solutions); Prosecco (Product-Service Co-design); and Innopse (Innovation Studio and exemplary developments for Product-Service).

The projects were undertaken by a mix of European research institutions and companies including Orange, Philips and Nokia. Some of these projects focused on developing methods that could help industries change their output from a product to a service. Others focused on the development of new product-services or solutions (HiCS, Prosecco, Innopse), and yet others tried to analyse under which circumstances product-services are likely to be implemented and accepted by consumers (Home Services). One project focused on dissemination of the concept to SMEs (Lean Services). Other projects focused purely on new product-service development, such as Brainfridge (an intelligent fridge managing its supply chain), ASP-NET (application service providers), Protex (intelligent enzymes) and IPSCON (receivers for wireless telephones). New Business for Old Europe brings together the key outputs from all of these groups to present a state-of-the-art collection on product-service development, prospects and implications for competitiveness and sustainability.

The book has a number of aims. First, it attempts to bridge the gap between business and sustainability literature to lead to a better-founded understanding of the business drivers for embarking on product-service development, and its relation with sustainability and competitiveness. Second, the book reviews the large amount of studies that have developed toolkits, methods and approaches that can support marketers, product developers and strategists in business to develop product-services, selects the best-practice approaches and analyses any gaps.

Third, the book examines what opportunities there are for product-service development in a variety of key areas including base materials, information and communication technologies, offices, food and households. Each chapter in this section discusses the area, developments that will stimulate or hinder the market opportunities for product-services, product-service examples, and typical implementation challenges for product-services in that area. These chapters serve as a quick introduction for companies interested in developing product-services in a specific area. Fourth, the book translates all the lessons into suggested approaches for product-service development by companies. Annexes include a lightweight 'product-service development manual' and an alphabetical list of useful underlying tools.

Foreword

Bas de Leeuw, UNEP DTIE, France


Part I: Product-services: the context

1. Introduction

Arnold Tukker, TNO, The Netherlands
    
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Part II: Fundamentals concerning competitiveness and sustainability

2. Product-services: a specific value proposition

Arnold Tukker and Christiaan van den Berg, TNO, The Netherlands, and Ursula Tischner, econcept, Germany


3. Product-services and competitiveness

Arnold Tukker and Christiaan van den Berg, TNO, The Netherlands


4. Product-services and sustainability

Arnold Tukker, TNO, The Netherlands, and Ursula Tischner and Martijn Verkuijl, econcept, Germany


Part III: Product-service development

5. The toolbox for product-service development

Martijn Verkuijl and Ursula Tischner, econcept, Germany, and Arnold Tukker, TNO, The Netherlands


Part IV: Potential for product-services in five need areas

6. Introduction to the need area-specific chapters

Arnold Tukker, TNO, The Netherlands


7. Need area 1: base materials

Rui Frazão and Cristina Rocha, INETI, Portugal
    
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8. Need area 2: information and communication technologies

Martin Charter, Graham Adams and Tom Clark, Centre for Sustainable Design, UK


9. Need area 3: offices

Martijn Verkuijl and Ursula Tischner, econcept, Germany


10. Need area 4: food

Erik Tempelman, Peter Joore, Tom van der Horst and Helma Luiten, TNO, The Netherlands


11. Need area 5: households

An Vercalsteren and Theo Geerken, VITO, Belgium


Part V: Reflections and conclusions

12. Towards an integrated approach to PSS design

Ursula Tischner, econcept, Germany, and Arnold Tukker, TNO, The Netherlands


13. Conclusions

Arnold Tukker, TNO, The Netherlands, and Ursula Tischner, econcept, Germany


Annex 1: A practical guide for PSS development

Ursula Tischner, econcept, Germany, and Arnold Tukker, TNO, The Netherlands


Annex 2: tools, alphabetical

Martijn Verkuijl and Ursula Tischner, econcept, Germany, and Arnold Tukker, TNO, The Netherlands


References



Arnold Tukker manages the research programme on Sustainable Transitions and System Innovation at TNO, Delft, and was the manager of SusProNet. He worked previously with the Dutch Environment Ministry on waste management and enforcement. At TNO he worked on issues such as life-cycle assessment and disputes on toxic substances. This work resulted in the book Frames in the Toxicity Controversy (Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999), which acquired him a PhD in 1998. In the last five to seven years he has focused on participatory policy-making and governance of sustainable system innovations, among others, via a four-year project with one PhD on foresight for system innovations within the Dutch Knowledge Network on System Innovations. He has positions on editorial boards of The Journal of Industrial Ecology, The Journal of Sustainable Product Design, The International Journal for Innovation and Sustainable Development and The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment, and is founding editor of Springer’s book series on Eco-efficiency. He has published four books, 40 peer-reviewed papers and over 200 other publications on a wide variety of subjects. He currently manages the EU-funded Sustainable Consumption Research Exchanges (SCORE!) project, which supports the UN’s Ten-Year Framework of Programmes on Sustainable Consumption and Production agreed on during the WSSD in Johannesburg in 2002.
Ursula Tischner is founder-director of econcept, Cologne, Germany, and has a position as associate professor in sustainable design at the Design Academy in Eindhoven, the Netherlands. She studied architecture and Industrial Design in Aachen and Wuppertal, Germany, and specialised in ecodesign. From 1992 to 1996 she worked at the Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy in the field of ecology and design. At the institute she was engaged in theoretical and practical projects and wrote a guide for environment-friendly product design on behalf of the Austrian Ministry for Science and Research, which was published in 1995. After establishing econcept in 1996 she advises small and medium-sized companies (SMEs) on ecodesign and helps to implement environmental improvements. She edited (with Martin Charter) the book Sustainable Solutions (Greenleaf Publishing, 2001) and (with Eva Schmincke, Frieder Rubik and Martin Prosler) the book How to do Ecodesign (Verlag form, 2000). She also played key roles in major international projects in the field of ecodesign and product-services, such as Methodology Product Service Systems (2002–2004), the UNEP manual on Product-Service Systems, and together with Arnold Tukker took responsibility for most of the methodological work in SusProNet.