Last visited:
Created by Adminsske on 13 May 2012, at 21:42

From SSKE

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
<font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="2"><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3"><span style="font-weight: normal">Service can be defined as</span></font><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3">''<span style="font-weight: normal">value-cocreation</span>''</font><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3"><span style="font-weight: normal">, value as change that</span></font><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3">people prefer, and value-cocreation as a change or set of related changes that people prefer and realize as a result of their communication, planning, or other purposeful and knowledge-intensive interactions.</font></font></font>
+
<font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="2"><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3"><span style="font-weight: normal">Service can be defined as</span></font><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3">''<span style="font-weight: normal">value-cocreation</span>''</font><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3"><span style="font-weight: normal">, value as change that</span></font><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3">people prefer, and value-cocreation as a change or set of related changes that people prefer and realize as a result of their communication, planning, or other purposeful and knowledge-intensive interactions.</font></font></font>  
  
<font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="2"><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3"><br/>A simple act of competition, such as playing a game of chess, can be an example of value-cocreation, benefiting the junior player to learn and benefiting the senior player to validate a performance ranking. However, the concepts of collaboration, competition, and coordination do not do justice to standardized or societal-scale patterns of value-cocreation phenomena. Money (universal medium of exchange), rights (universal rule of law), and literacy (universal education) are three of the most profound service-enabling innovations ever made.
+
<br/><font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="2"><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3">A simple act of competition, such as playing a game of chess, can be an example of value-cocreation, benefiting the junior player to learn and benefiting the senior player to validate a performance ranking. However, the concepts of collaboration, competition, and coordination do not do justice to standardized or societal-scale patterns of value-cocreation phenomena. Money (universal medium of exchange), rights (universal rule of law), and literacy (universal education) are three of the most profound service-enabling innovations ever made.</font></font></font> <font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="2"><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3"></font></font></font>
  
Value-cocreation phenomena may be the most powerful force shaping the evolution of the world in which we live.
+
<font face="Times New Roman, serif"><font size="2"><font style="font-size: 13pt" size="3">Value-cocreation phenomena may be the most powerful force shaping the evolution of the world in which we live.</font></font></font>
  
</font></font></font>
+
[[Category:SSKE Knowledge/Value Co-Creation]]
 +
 
 +
{{#ask: [[Category:SSKE Knowledge/Value Co-Creation]]
 +
| format=table
 +
| source=tsc
 +
| merge=false
 +
|}}

Revision as of 06:28, 4 July 2012

Service can be defined asvalue-cocreation, value as change thatpeople prefer, and value-cocreation as a change or set of related changes that people prefer and realize as a result of their communication, planning, or other purposeful and knowledge-intensive interactions.


A simple act of competition, such as playing a game of chess, can be an example of value-cocreation, benefiting the junior player to learn and benefiting the senior player to validate a performance ranking. However, the concepts of collaboration, competition, and coordination do not do justice to standardized or societal-scale patterns of value-cocreation phenomena. Money (universal medium of exchange), rights (universal rule of law), and literacy (universal education) are three of the most profound service-enabling innovations ever made.

Value-cocreation phenomena may be the most powerful force shaping the evolution of the world in which we live.

warning.pngTSC not accessible. Check server: localhost:8080