(Redirected from Experience Economy)The 'Experience Economy', according to
B. Joseph Pine II and
James H. Gilmore in their
1999 book of the same name, is an advanced
service economy which has begun to sell "
mass customization" services that are similar to
theatre, using underlying
goods and
services as
props.
Businesses must orchestrate memorable events for their customers, they argue, and that memory itself becomes the product - the "experience". More advanced experience businesses can begin charging for the value of the "transformation" that an experience offers, e.g. as
education offerings might do if they were able to participate in the value that is created by the educated individual. This, they argue, is a natural progression in the
value added by the business over and above its inputs.
Five ways of marketing a product or service
A core argument is that because of technology, increasing competition, and the increasing expectations of consumers, services today are starting to look like
commodities. Products can be placed on a continuum from undifferentiated (referred to as commodities) to highly
differentiated. Just as
service markets build on
goods markets which in turn build on
commodity markets, so transformation and experience markets build on these newly commoditized services, e.g.
Internet bandwidth,
consulting help.
The classification for each stage in the evolution of
products is:
★ If you charge for undifferentiated stuff, then you are in the 'commodity business'.
★ If you charge for distinctive tangible things, then you are in the 'goods business'.
★ If you charge for the activities you perform, then you are in the 'service business'.
★ If you charge for the feeling customers have because of engaging you, then you are in the 'experience business'.
★ If you charge for the benefit customers (or "guests") receive as a result of spending that time, you are in the 'transformation business'.
Proceeding to the next stage more or less requires giving away products at the more commodified level. For instance, to charge for service, e.g. new car warranties, one must be prepared to give away new cars to replace 'lemons'. And, to charge for transformations, one must be prepared to risk there being no payment for the time you spend working with customers who don't "transform".
Pine and Gilmore draw on
Walt Disney,
AOL,
Nordstrom,
Starbucks,
Saturn and
IBM as examples.
Criticisms
Their thesis has been criticized as an example of an over-hyped
business philosophy arising from or in the
dotcom boom and a rising economy in the
U.S. that was tolerant of high prices, inflated claims, and no limitations of supply - or
investment. Detractors contrast it with other service economy theses such as
Natural Capitalism, in which there is a clear focus on making measurably better use of scarce resources, usually considered to be the basis of
economics. They claim service management should stress efficiency more than effectiveness. The thesis has also been criticized from within the fields of Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Studies where theories as to the role of experiences in the economy were already well established prior to the work of Pine and Gilmore but were not acknowledged in their work. Although continuing to influence business thinking the concept has already been superseded within much Service Marketing and Management literature by the argument that the value of all goods and services are co-created or co-produced through the interaction of consumers and producers. Therefore, at one level of abstraction all consumption can be understood in experiential terms.
Lists of related topics
★
list of marketing topics
★
list of management topics
★
list of economics topics
★
list of finance topics
★
list of accounting topics
References
★ Pine, J. and Gilmore, J. (1999) ''The Experience Economy'', Harvard Business School Press, Boston, 1999.
★
Publisher's review
★ Schmitt, B. (2003) ''Customer Experience Management'', The Free Press, New York, 2003.
★ Schmitt, B. and Simonson, A. (1997) In ''Marketing Aesthetics:The strategic management of brands, identity, and image'' The Free Press, New York, 1997.