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2020/2021  KAN-CCMVV5031U  Advanced Perspectives in Brand Co-creation: Innovation opportunities and ethical challenges

English Title
Advanced Perspectives in Brand Co-creation: Innovation opportunities and ethical challenges

Course information

Language English
Course ECTS 7.5 ECTS
Type Elective
Level Full Degree Master
Duration One Quarter
Start time of the course First Quarter
Timetable Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk
Max. participants 100
Study board
Study Board for MSc in Economics and Business Administration
Course coordinator
  • Richard Jones - Department of Marketing (Marketing)
  • Stefan Markovic - Department of Marketing (Marketing)
Main academic disciplines
  • Innovation
  • Communication
  • Marketing
Teaching methods
  • Face-to-face teaching
Last updated on 16-01-2020

Relevant links

Learning objectives
Define, characterise and compare different brand co-creation perspectives
  • Identify and define relevant ethical perspectives to brand co-creation processes and outputs and critically discuss their implications
  • Identify and discuss practical and ethical implications and limitations of brand co-creation processes
  • Apply the theoretical knowledge of brand co-creation processes and their ethicality to real brand cases
Course prerequisites
This course is designed for students from a range of Masters’ programmes in branding, communication, innovation and business ethics.
Examination
Advanced Perspectives in Brand Co-creation: Innovation opportunities and ethical challenges:
Exam ECTS 7,5
Examination form Home assignment - written product
Individual or group exam Individual exam
Size of written product Max. 15 pages
Assignment type Project
Duration 2 weeks to prepare
Grading scale 7-point grading scale
Examiner(s) One internal examiner
Exam period Autumn
Make-up exam/re-exam
Same examination form as the ordinary exam
if the student fails the ordinary exam the student will have to hand in a new project bases on new questions
Course content, structure and pedagogical approach

This advanced course confronts students with and prepares them for a complex branding reality in which customers and other stakeholders are every day more involved in various brand co-creation processes (i.e., co-creation of brand value, identity, experience, knowledge, meaning, products and services). Nowadays, brands face a socioeconomic scenario that is characterized by online communities, decentralized organizations, fast and flexible new production facilities, and a rapid evolution of information technologies. This evolution has led to an improved brand-stakeholder interconnectivity, which has provided brands with the opportunity of involving their key stakeholders in brand co-creation processes. The management potential is enormous as evidenced by the emergence of new business models that integrate customers (e.g., AirBnB & Uber) and the rest of stakeholders (e.g., Amazon) into their core business processes. However, the current enhanced brand-stakeholder interconnectivity has also turned the environment into a more transparent one, giving rise to ethical concerns in business. In such environment, a host of ethical issues arise that are not always well considered. For example, who owns intellectual property rights of the co-created outputs? What about the processes? Where does responsibility lie when things go wrong? Who is culpable? What is the proper division of labour? Can we talk of “working consumers” or is this just free labour? What reward systems are equitable and relevant? Should there be limits of involving vulnerable stakeholders? Furthermore, what are the expectations on brands involved in co-creation? Are they different from brands not involved in co-creation?

 

In this course students will be confronted with the most renowned theoretical brand co-creation perspectives and will learn how brands ought to be managed in an ever more interconnected environment where ethical brand behaviours are a must. The theoretical discussion will be complemented with input from brand academics and practitioners as well as with hands-on applications of different brand co-creation approaches to actual brand cases. The course will prepare students who want to work in brand-building projects in different contexts in their future career. It provides the basis for development of knowledge and understanding of how brands are co-created and maintained in relation to multiple stakeholders in dynamic environments where ethicality is every day more demanded, and thereby prepares students for a challenging career in branding.

 

This course is designed for students from a range of Masters’ programmes in branding, communication, innovation and business ethics.

Description of the teaching methods
The course uses a mix of pedagogies to maximise student learning. The course is centred around in-class seminars which mix traditional lecturing with workshops, cases, student presentations, discussions and guest lectures. In addition, we will be using on-line tools in the form of peer grading and discussion fora between seminars. The class is highly interactive both online and offline with a corresponding expectation that students engage in these interactions.
Feedback during the teaching period
Continual feedback and reflection is central to this course. In in-class seminars traditional lecturing includes workshops, cases, student presentations, and discussions where feedback either in plenum, groups or individual is given. In addition, we will be using on-line tools in the form of peer grading and discussion fora between seminars for student to student feedback.
Student workload
In-class seminars 33 hours
Preparation for seminars 98 hours
Preparation for workshops 20 hours
Peer to peer exercise 15 hours
Exam 40 hours
Expected literature

Indicative reference list:

 

Lise-Lotte Lindfelt Jan-Åke Törnroos, (2006),"Ethics and value creation in business research: comparing two approaches", European Journal of Marketing, Vol. 40 Iss 3/4 pp. 328 – 351

 

McColl-Kennedy, J. R., Hogan, S. J., Witell, L., & Snyder, H. (2017). Cocreative customer practices: Effects of health care customer value cocreation practices on well-being. Journal of Business Research, 70, 55-66.

 

Nysveen, H., & Pedersen, P. E. (2014). Influences of co-creation on brand experience The role of brand engagement. International Journal of Market Research, 56(6), 807-832.

 

Payne, A. F., Storbacka, K., & Frow, P. (2008). Managing the co-creation of value. Journal of the academy of marketing science, 36(1), 83-96.

 

Ranjan, K. R., & Read, S. (2016). Value co-creation: concept and measurement. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 44(3), 290-315.

 

Roggeveen, A. L., Tsiros, M., & Grewal, D. (2012). Understanding the co-creation effect: when does collaborating with customers provide a lift to service recovery?. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 40(6), 771-790.

 

Santos-Vijande, M. L., López-Sánchez, J. Á., & Rudd, J. (2016). Frontline employees’ collaboration in industrial service innovation: routes of co-creation’s effects on new service performance. Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 44(3), 350-375.

 

Schau, H. J., Muñiz Jr, A. M., & Arnould, E. J. (2009). How brand community practices create value. Journal of marketing, 73(5), 30-51.

 

Stanislawski, S. (2011). The Service-Dominant Logic of Marketing and the Ethics of Co-Creation.

 

Williams, J., & Aitken, R. (2011). The service-dominant logic of marketing and marketing ethics. Journal of Business Ethics, 102(3), 439-454.

 

Last updated on 16-01-2020