Co-creation 1: Mass customisation

Mass customisation is at one end of the co-creation spectrum - each product is customised for the particular customer who is purchasing it. Unlike what we often think of as co-creation, the individual customer does not influence the product for others. But they co-create their own product with the brand to deliver a customised version.

There has often been an element of mass customisation in higher-value products (such as cars or houses). But the internet has allowed mass customisation on a broader scale and for a wider-range of products. Brands can work with customers to co-create certain elements of their product or sometimes more fundamental aspects of the product itself.

Dell allows customers to customise every single product it sells. This is co-creation on a very individual stage - each customer choosing from a set of options to customise and create their own perfect machine. Whilst this approach doesn’t mean that every computer is different it does dramatically increase the options and configurations open to the consumer. And it allows the consumer to work with the brand on the final design and assembly stage of the product to create something that is right for them. Levis on the other hand does allow a customisation process by which, in theory, no two pairs of jeans need ever be the same.

Mass customisation has only become a viable means of co-creating with consumers once the process can essentially become self-serve. The design of the manufacturing process is such that the customer can guide and control the final assembly stages and influence what their product looks like. They can work with the suggestions and process that the brand has laid out to achieve this.

Of course, this is really ‘co-creation lite’. Whilst it allows for customers to work with brands to tailor and refine their own product it does not input into product design of the brand experience of others. Whatever great combinations and suggestions that people have to customise their own product there is usually no overt and direct mechanism for this design to be replicated across the brand and made available to others.

There are examples of organisations that do this. Allow people to customise their own product but then work with others to decide which are appropriate for a wider production and a wider audience. This is stronger co-creation and will be the focus of our next installment in the Co-Creation Series.

10 Comments

  1. Co-creation 1: Mass customisation « Living in the Oneline World:

    [...] Co-creation 1: Mass customisation 21Aug08 Co-creation 1: Mass customisation [...]

  2. Richard Millington:

    Great post Matt. Have you been reading much of Clay Shirky’s work. There’s a lot of discussion about how technology is being used in these different ways.

  3. FutureGov » Useful links » links for 2008-08-21:

    [...] FreshNetworks Blog » Blog Archive » Co-creation 1: Mass customisation "Mass customisation is at one end of the co-creation spectrum - each product is customised for the particular customer who is purchasing it. Unlike what we often think of as co-creation, the individual customer does not influence the product for others. But they co-create their own product with the brand to deliver a customised version." (tags: publicservices improvement coproduction enabledbydesign) [...]

  4. FreshNetworks Blog » Blog Archive » Co-creation 2: Real-time self-service:

    [...] Join the team « Co-creation 1: Mass customisation [...]

  5. FreshNetworks Blog » Blog Archive » Co-creation 3: Service redesign:

    [...] and brand can work together to improve the customer’s own experience of the product. Neither mass customisation nor real-time self-service impact on the product experience of other customers. They change the [...]

  6. FreshNetworks Blog » Blog Archive » Co-creation and innovation - the ‘we’ experience:

    [...] « BBC and Business Week show it’s how you organise the information that counts Co-creation 1: Mass customisation [...]

  7. FreshNetworks Blog » Blog Archive » Co-creation 4: New product co-creation:

    [...] at two examples of co-creation that change only the customer’s own experience of the product (mass customisation and real-time self-service), and one example where the customer helps to change the way a product [...]

  8. FreshNetworks Blog » Blog Archive » Co-creation 5: Community product design:

    [...] and driver of change and innovation. They may allow the user to customise the product they receive (mass customisation), customise the experience right up to the point of delivery (real-time self-service), innovate and [...]

  9. FreshNetworks Blog » Blog Archive » The co-creation spectrum:

    [...] Co-creation 1: Mass customisation [...]

  10. FreshNetworks Blog » Blog Archive » Crowdsourcing - does the customer know best?:

    [...] written a lot in the past about co-creation, from Mass Customisation to Community Product Design. In some of the more devloped examples of co-creating with customers [...]

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