State-of-the-Art in Product-Service System Classification

Author(s):  
Mariusz Salwin ◽  
Andrzej Kraslawski
2016 ◽  
Vol 78 (6-9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Omar Sabbagh ◽  
Mohd Nizam Ab Rahman ◽  
Wan Rosmanira Ismail ◽  
Wan Mohd Hirwani Wan Hussain

This article discusses the state of the art of the automotive product-service system (PSS) approaches by conducting a critical and comprehensive review of papers published from 1999 to 2015; it investigates the research methodologies employed to tackle the automotive product-service discipline by analyzing the benefits and drawbacks of each research methodology. It is evident that the quantitative methodology is more popular than other research methodologies and this is attributed to the empirical nature of the collected data and the wide use of various statistical tools. This review forms an immense contribution for the researchers and practitioners who are conducting studies in automotive product-service field as this paper provides insight into the research methods and paradigm.


Author(s):  
T S Baines ◽  
H W Lightfoot ◽  
S Evans ◽  
A Neely ◽  
R Greenough ◽  
...  

A Product-Service System (PSS) is an integrated combination of products and services. This Western concept embraces a service-led competitive strategy, environmental sustainability, and the basis to differentiate from competitors who simply offer lower priced products. This paper aims to report the state-of-the-art of PSS research by presenting a clinical review of literature currently available on this topic. The literature is classified and the major outcomes of each study are addressed and analysed. On this basis, this paper defines the PSS concept, reports on its origin and features, gives examples of applications along with potential benefits and barriers to adoption, summarizes available tools and methodologies, and identifies future research challenges.


Procedia CIRP ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. 192-197 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudio Sassanelli ◽  
Giuditta Pezzotta ◽  
Fabiana Pirola ◽  
Sergio Terzi ◽  
Monica Rossi

2015 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 171-195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong, Yong-pyo ◽  
Young Jun Kim

Author(s):  
Nur Indrianti ◽  
Devika Kumala ◽  
Tri Wibawa

Increasing awareness of the importance of services has given rise to the concept of product-service system where goods and services are sold as an integrated package to customers. On the other hand, the emerging sustainability concept has escalated the demand for sustainability for industries. Consequently, it is necessary to build strategies that lead the company to achieve sustainability goals while keeping competitiveness. Drawing on the necessity service and sustainability concept in the quality improvement of the product-service system, this study aims to develop a systematic design tool by filling the gap to the previous studies. We used Quality Function Deployment (QFD) approach by considering customer requirements (VoC) and stakeholder requirements (VoSt), instead of VoC only, based on the service and sustainability dimensions. We refer to the proposed QFD approach as QFDSPS. We introduce service productivity index (SPI) to measure the performance of the system. Thus, in the proposed methodology, the strategies for quality improvement were defined as subject to VoC, VoSt, and SPI. The methodology was implemented in a Javanese restaurant which meets the characteristics of a product-service system. The result shows that the proposed method can be implemented. The implications due to the implementation of the method are also discussed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 294 ◽  
pp. 126188
Author(s):  
Yeneneh Tamirat Negash ◽  
Liria Salome Calahorrano Sarmiento ◽  
Ming-Lang Tseng ◽  
Korbkul Jantarakolica ◽  
Kimhua Tan

2021 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 1411-1420
Author(s):  
Ryan Michael Ruvald ◽  
Andreas Larsson ◽  
Christian Johansson Askling ◽  
Alessandro Bertoni ◽  
Tobias Larsson

AbstractPrototypes are an established tool for rapidly increasing learning, communication and decision making rationale for design projects. The proven success has spawned a litany of approaches and methods for building and planning the efficient planning and construction of prototypes. Translating these methods into simple usable tools to assist novice designers has generated broadly applicable canvases to support prototyping across the design process. Product Service System design has similarly introduced prototyping methods and tools into the process. Presently there is a lack of support for generating early phase tangible prototypes for functional PSS design aimed at more radically innovative solutions instead of currently dominant traditional products with traditional add-on services. This work explores the viability of utilizing existing prototyping support tools in the context of early PSS design through workshops with student designers and practitioners. The data from these workshops illuminates the alignments and misalignment gaps presented as guidelines to enable better support for early PSS designers.


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