Observing autonomous product development: A grounded theoretical analysis of product innovation outside the boundaries of firms

The development of tools or products has always been fundamental to human progress, societal evolution and thereby a sustainable future. Thanks to the decreasing cost of 3D printing technology, we can develop complex products in the comfort of our home – and with the help of online communities. Desp...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carrielle Somers, Jörg Henseler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-06-01
Series:Sustainable Futures
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666188825003016
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849693820146417664
author Carrielle Somers
Jörg Henseler
author_facet Carrielle Somers
Jörg Henseler
author_sort Carrielle Somers
collection DOAJ
description The development of tools or products has always been fundamental to human progress, societal evolution and thereby a sustainable future. Thanks to the decreasing cost of 3D printing technology, we can develop complex products in the comfort of our home – and with the help of online communities. Despite this phenomenon, personal product development is less represented in product innovation literature, where profit-driven outcomes are prioritised. This gap in literature led to the main research question of this paper: how do individuals autonomously innovate products within open community settings? In order to find out, we interviewed makers (autonomous developers) of personal woodworking, metalworking, robotics, and 3D printed products.Through grounded theoretical discovery, we were able to answer the main question with three concepts – a range of product innovation, stages of autonomous product development and product innovation outcomes. The range of product innovation demonstrates three types of product development activities – copying, innovating and acquiring exclusivity. Four stages of autonomous product development were inferred motivations behind the range. Makers are motivated to evolve evolve a competence first. They then choose to innovate and finally increase individualistic development. These motivations result in product innovation outcomes during their development process. Product innovation outcomes are instances that lead to the introduction of something novel such as an idea, method or product. 16 outcomes are classified in this paper by the community and 13 by the individual developer.Our findings on autonomous product development contribute to future research in circular economy and sustainability. They present a foundation to examine development activities and motivations to upcycle household waste and minimises packaging. In addition, our research supports diffusion of innovations theory and social learning theory. Identifying autonomous development activities, motivations and outcomes show that even personal product innovations can be created, enhanced and influenced by open community systems. By demonstrating that complex scientific products can be learned in communities through social learning methods such as copying, personalising and acquiring exclusivity, this research enhances social learning theory.
format Article
id doaj-art-b3b0bb44256d4522bb47138fa152915f
institution DOAJ
issn 2666-1888
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Sustainable Futures
spelling doaj-art-b3b0bb44256d4522bb47138fa152915f2025-08-20T03:20:16ZengElsevierSustainable Futures2666-18882025-06-01910073510.1016/j.sftr.2025.100735Observing autonomous product development: A grounded theoretical analysis of product innovation outside the boundaries of firmsCarrielle Somers0Jörg Henseler1Faculty of Engineering Technology, University of Twente, Enschede, the NetherlandsFaculty of Engineering Technology, University of Twente, Enschede, the Netherlands; Nova Information Management School, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal; Corresponding author.The development of tools or products has always been fundamental to human progress, societal evolution and thereby a sustainable future. Thanks to the decreasing cost of 3D printing technology, we can develop complex products in the comfort of our home – and with the help of online communities. Despite this phenomenon, personal product development is less represented in product innovation literature, where profit-driven outcomes are prioritised. This gap in literature led to the main research question of this paper: how do individuals autonomously innovate products within open community settings? In order to find out, we interviewed makers (autonomous developers) of personal woodworking, metalworking, robotics, and 3D printed products.Through grounded theoretical discovery, we were able to answer the main question with three concepts – a range of product innovation, stages of autonomous product development and product innovation outcomes. The range of product innovation demonstrates three types of product development activities – copying, innovating and acquiring exclusivity. Four stages of autonomous product development were inferred motivations behind the range. Makers are motivated to evolve evolve a competence first. They then choose to innovate and finally increase individualistic development. These motivations result in product innovation outcomes during their development process. Product innovation outcomes are instances that lead to the introduction of something novel such as an idea, method or product. 16 outcomes are classified in this paper by the community and 13 by the individual developer.Our findings on autonomous product development contribute to future research in circular economy and sustainability. They present a foundation to examine development activities and motivations to upcycle household waste and minimises packaging. In addition, our research supports diffusion of innovations theory and social learning theory. Identifying autonomous development activities, motivations and outcomes show that even personal product innovations can be created, enhanced and influenced by open community systems. By demonstrating that complex scientific products can be learned in communities through social learning methods such as copying, personalising and acquiring exclusivity, this research enhances social learning theory.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666188825003016Autonomous product developmentGrounded theoryMaker communitiesProduct innovationProduct innovation outcomes
spellingShingle Carrielle Somers
Jörg Henseler
Observing autonomous product development: A grounded theoretical analysis of product innovation outside the boundaries of firms
Sustainable Futures
Autonomous product development
Grounded theory
Maker communities
Product innovation
Product innovation outcomes
title Observing autonomous product development: A grounded theoretical analysis of product innovation outside the boundaries of firms
title_full Observing autonomous product development: A grounded theoretical analysis of product innovation outside the boundaries of firms
title_fullStr Observing autonomous product development: A grounded theoretical analysis of product innovation outside the boundaries of firms
title_full_unstemmed Observing autonomous product development: A grounded theoretical analysis of product innovation outside the boundaries of firms
title_short Observing autonomous product development: A grounded theoretical analysis of product innovation outside the boundaries of firms
title_sort observing autonomous product development a grounded theoretical analysis of product innovation outside the boundaries of firms
topic Autonomous product development
Grounded theory
Maker communities
Product innovation
Product innovation outcomes
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666188825003016
work_keys_str_mv AT carriellesomers observingautonomousproductdevelopmentagroundedtheoreticalanalysisofproductinnovationoutsidetheboundariesoffirms
AT jorghenseler observingautonomousproductdevelopmentagroundedtheoreticalanalysisofproductinnovationoutsidetheboundariesoffirms