Abstract

Data is becoming a more and more important resource for future innovations. Companies are currently considering how to leverage personal data in preventive healthcare and in other sectors. However, there are many challenges hindering the development of data-driven businesses in extant business networks. The purpose of this paper is to explore the success factors of data-driven service delivery networks in the context of preventive healthcare. The results are examples of the benefits and challenges of data availability and usage, based on a qualitative case study, in which a network of actors is integrating resources to solve the needs of their end customers. The results underline the success factors for service delivery networks, creating a baseline for human-centric, personalized and preventive healthcare solutions. The study enriches the theoretical perspective of data, services and service delivery networks by continuing discussion on how big data resources become cooperative assets not only in a firm but also on the network level. This study has multiple implications for practitioners trying to navigate the turbulent waters of the changing business environment and evolving service delivery network of preventive healthcare. Especially small and medium size of firms could use the identified success factors when planning new data-driven services in their networks. Our analysis brings new perspective between a firm and the actors in its network, particularly in the preventive healthcare sector wherein data needs to be shared between actors via consent of the individuals.

Highlights

  • The world is increasingly data-infused and the context in which services are delivered is irrevocably changed by advances in technology

  • The purpose of this paper is to explore the success factors of data-driven service delivery networks in the context of preventive healthcare

  • The aim of this paper is to understand what the factors affecting to the success and failure of data-driven service delivery networks are in the context of preventive healthcare

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Summary

Introduction

The world is increasingly data-infused and the context in which services are delivered is irrevocably changed by advances in technology. The value of personal data is large and growing (Schwartz, 2014), and is expected to grow into a market worth nearly e1 trillion by 2020 in Europe alone (Ctrl-Shift, 2014; European commission, 2016). Organizations in both public and private sectors have long been collecting personal data to gain insight, efficiency and competitive advantage (Ericsson, 2013), for example, by removing information asymmetries and facilitating efficient transactions (Facebook, 2014)

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