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What is Customer and User Involvement

Handbook of Research on Open Source Software: Technological, Economic, and Social Perspectives
Describes the extent to which a customer is engaged as a participant in business operations, specifically in service production and delivery, including, for example, order processing and account management.
Published in Chapter:
Open Source Software Business Models and Customer Involvement Economics
Christoph Schlueter Langdon (Center for Telecom Management, University of Southern California, USA) and Alexander Hars (Inventivio GmbH, Bayreuth, Germany)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59140-999-1.ch040
Abstract
This chapter is focused on the business economics of open source. From a strategic perspective, open source falls into a category of business models that generate advantages based on customer and user involvement ( CUI). While open source has been a novel strategy in the software business, CUI-based strategies have been used elsewhere before. Since the success of e-commerce and e-business, CUI-based strategies have become far more prevalent for at least two reasons: Firstly, advances in information technology and systems have improved feasibility of implementation of CUI strategies and secondly, CUI-based economics appear to have often become a requirement for e-business profitability. This chapter presents a review of CUI-based competition, clearly delineates CUI antecedents and business value consequences, and concludes with a synopsis of managerial implications and a specific focus on open source.
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