TY - JOUR
T1 - How to create value(s) i n the sharing economy
T2 - Business models, scalability, and sustainability
AU - Acquier, Aurelien
AU - Carbone, Valentina
AU - Masse, David
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Technology Innovation Management Review. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019/1/1
Y1 - 2019/1/1
N2 - By organizing peer-to-peer exchanges and promoting access over ownership, the sharing economy is transforming a great variety of sectors. Enjoying fast growth, the sharing economy is an umbrella term encompassing heterogeneous initiatives that create different types of economic, environmental, or social value. This heterogeneity triggers tensions and intense disputes about the perimeter of the field. Do Airbnb and Uber belong to the sharing economy? How do we consider practices such as gifting, renting, and swapping that existed before the sharing economy boom? To sort out this complexity, we have adopted a pragmatic and grounded approach examining 27 initiatives that claim to be part of, or are perceived as emblematic of the sharing economy. We develop a typology of sharing economy business models revealing four configurations: Shared infrastructure providers, commoners, missiondriven platforms, and matchmakers. Each configuration exhibits specific value-creation logics, scalability issues, sustainability impacts, and potential controversies. Our results provide guidance for sharing entrepreneurs, for established businesses that want to embrace the principles of the sharing economy, and for public actors wishing to regulate or support the field.
AB - By organizing peer-to-peer exchanges and promoting access over ownership, the sharing economy is transforming a great variety of sectors. Enjoying fast growth, the sharing economy is an umbrella term encompassing heterogeneous initiatives that create different types of economic, environmental, or social value. This heterogeneity triggers tensions and intense disputes about the perimeter of the field. Do Airbnb and Uber belong to the sharing economy? How do we consider practices such as gifting, renting, and swapping that existed before the sharing economy boom? To sort out this complexity, we have adopted a pragmatic and grounded approach examining 27 initiatives that claim to be part of, or are perceived as emblematic of the sharing economy. We develop a typology of sharing economy business models revealing four configurations: Shared infrastructure providers, commoners, missiondriven platforms, and matchmakers. Each configuration exhibits specific value-creation logics, scalability issues, sustainability impacts, and potential controversies. Our results provide guidance for sharing entrepreneurs, for established businesses that want to embrace the principles of the sharing economy, and for public actors wishing to regulate or support the field.
KW - Business model
KW - Scalability
KW - Sharing economy
KW - Sustainability
KW - Value creation
KW - Value distribution
U2 - 10.22215/TIMREVIEW/1215
DO - 10.22215/TIMREVIEW/1215
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85113351673
SN - 1927-0321
VL - 9
SP - 5
EP - 24
JO - Technology Innovation Management Review
JF - Technology Innovation Management Review
IS - 2
ER -