Design-Oriented stakeholder engagement in service ecosystems
通过一项出行即服务生态系统的纵向案例研究,提出了面向设计的利益相关者参与概念,揭示了角色反思的三个层次如何影响利益相关者在服务生态系统设计中的资源投入。
• Introduces the concept of Design-Oriented Stakeholder Engagement (DOSE) in service ecosystem design processes. • Presents a framework for analyzing stakeholder dynamics in service ecosystem design processes. • Identifies role myopia and role uncertainty as barriers to effective DOSE. • Conceptualizes three degrees of role-based reflexivity: self-perceived role, current systemic role and future systemic role. • Demonstrates how varying degrees of reflexivity guide stakeholders’ resource investments in designing service ecosystems. This study investigates the role of stakeholder engagement in service ecosystem design through a longitudinal case study of a mobility-as-a-service ecosystem. The study makes three key contributions to the literature on service ecosystem design and stakeholder engagement. First, we conceptualize design-oriented stakeholder engagement (DOSE) as a stakeholder’s level of resource investments and expenses in design and non-design processes toward a focal design object. This framework reveals how stakeholders’ varying resource endowments manifest across both design processes (reflexivity and reformation) and non-design processes (reproduction). Second, we identify that stakeholders’ reflexive capabilities manifest in three degrees – focused on self-perceived role, current systemic role, and future systemic role – with those stakeholders who are capable of systemic reflection demonstrating higher voluntary resource investments than those who focused solely on their current roles. Third, we identify role myopia and role uncertainty as barriers that impede higher degrees of reflexivity, explaining differences in stakeholders’ resource investments and engagement levels throughout the design process.