What Is an Ecosystem? Incorporating 25 Years of Ecosystem Research

Research output: Contribution to journalConference abstract in journalResearch

Standard

What Is an Ecosystem? Incorporating 25 Years of Ecosystem Research. / Bogers, Marcel; Sims, Jonathan; West, Joel.

In: Academy of Management Proceedings, Vol. 2019, No. 1, 11080, 2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalConference abstract in journalResearch

Harvard

Bogers, M, Sims, J & West, J 2019, 'What Is an Ecosystem? Incorporating 25 Years of Ecosystem Research', Academy of Management Proceedings, vol. 2019, no. 1, 11080. https://doi.org/10.5465/AMBPP.2019.11080abstract

APA

Bogers, M., Sims, J., & West, J. (2019). What Is an Ecosystem? Incorporating 25 Years of Ecosystem Research. Academy of Management Proceedings, 2019(1), [11080]. https://doi.org/10.5465/AMBPP.2019.11080abstract

Vancouver

Bogers M, Sims J, West J. What Is an Ecosystem? Incorporating 25 Years of Ecosystem Research. Academy of Management Proceedings. 2019;2019(1). 11080. https://doi.org/10.5465/AMBPP.2019.11080abstract

Author

Bogers, Marcel ; Sims, Jonathan ; West, Joel. / What Is an Ecosystem? Incorporating 25 Years of Ecosystem Research. In: Academy of Management Proceedings. 2019 ; Vol. 2019, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{04a384f503924f79928bb1c0836fec7e,
title = "What Is an Ecosystem?: Incorporating 25 Years of Ecosystem Research",
abstract = "Ecosystems are increasingly recognized as crucial for the success of a firm{\textquoteright}s innovation strategy and business model. They are also a topic attracting increasing academic interest, with more than 300 articles published in top journals since 1992, most in the past five years. Based on an examination of this research, we propose a new definition that links the central goal of an ecosystem – joint value creation – to three constructs: goals of ecosystem members, the network of relations between these members, and the interdependence of their respective goals. We show how the four components of this definition allow ecosystem researchers to incorporate insights across a wide range of previously excluded studies of ecosystems and related topics. From this, we summarize the research opportunities made possible by this more inclusive definition, including research on each of the components, the interconnection between components, and with the ecosystem used as a level of analysis.",
author = "Marcel Bogers and Jonathan Sims and Joel West",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.5465/AMBPP.2019.11080abstract",
language = "English",
volume = "2019",
journal = "Academy of Management Proceedings",
issn = "2151-6561",
publisher = "Academy of Management",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - What Is an Ecosystem?

T2 - Incorporating 25 Years of Ecosystem Research

AU - Bogers, Marcel

AU - Sims, Jonathan

AU - West, Joel

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Ecosystems are increasingly recognized as crucial for the success of a firm’s innovation strategy and business model. They are also a topic attracting increasing academic interest, with more than 300 articles published in top journals since 1992, most in the past five years. Based on an examination of this research, we propose a new definition that links the central goal of an ecosystem – joint value creation – to three constructs: goals of ecosystem members, the network of relations between these members, and the interdependence of their respective goals. We show how the four components of this definition allow ecosystem researchers to incorporate insights across a wide range of previously excluded studies of ecosystems and related topics. From this, we summarize the research opportunities made possible by this more inclusive definition, including research on each of the components, the interconnection between components, and with the ecosystem used as a level of analysis.

AB - Ecosystems are increasingly recognized as crucial for the success of a firm’s innovation strategy and business model. They are also a topic attracting increasing academic interest, with more than 300 articles published in top journals since 1992, most in the past five years. Based on an examination of this research, we propose a new definition that links the central goal of an ecosystem – joint value creation – to three constructs: goals of ecosystem members, the network of relations between these members, and the interdependence of their respective goals. We show how the four components of this definition allow ecosystem researchers to incorporate insights across a wide range of previously excluded studies of ecosystems and related topics. From this, we summarize the research opportunities made possible by this more inclusive definition, including research on each of the components, the interconnection between components, and with the ecosystem used as a level of analysis.

U2 - 10.5465/AMBPP.2019.11080abstract

DO - 10.5465/AMBPP.2019.11080abstract

M3 - Conference abstract in journal

VL - 2019

JO - Academy of Management Proceedings

JF - Academy of Management Proceedings

SN - 2151-6561

IS - 1

M1 - 11080

ER -

ID: 225558593