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What’s Mine is Yours: The Rise of Collaborative Consumption
 
 
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What’s Mine is Yours: The Rise of Collaborative Consumption [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

Rachel Botsman , Roo Rogers
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What’s Mine is Yours: The Rise of Collaborative Consumption + The Mesh: Why the Future of Business Is Sharing + Business Model Generation: A Handbook for Visionaries, Game Changers, and Challengers
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Produktinformation

  • Taschenbuch: 280 Seiten
  • Verlag: Harpercollins UK; Auflage: Trade Paperback. (3. Februar 2011)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0007395914
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007395910
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 23 x 15,2 x 2,4 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 5.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (2 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 1.044 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

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Produktbeschreibungen

Pressestimmen

"People are normally trustworthy and generous, and the Internet brings the good out far more than the bad. That's the big observation from my day job, customer service, for fifteen years. We're seeing an explosion of modest businesses where people help each other out via the Net, and What's Mine is Yours tells you what's going on, and inspires more of the same." -- Craig Newmark, Founder of Craigslist "What can the next wave of collaborative marketplaces look like? Botsman and Rogers answer this question in a highly readable and persuasive way. Anyone interested in the business opportunities and social power of collaboration should consider reading this book." -- Tony Hsieh, author of Delivering Happiness and CEO of Zappos.com, Inc. "After listening to a thousand tirades against the excesses and waste of consumer society, What's Mine Is Yours offers us something genuinely new and invigorating: a way out. Anyone interested in the emerging economics of collaboration will want to read this profoundly hopeful book." -- Steven Johnson, author of The Invention of Air and The Ghost Map. "At a moment of general gloom, Rachel Botsman and Roo Rogers have offered a convincing, charming and in every sense collaborative account of how the new networks that have disrupted our lives are also likely to alter them, and entirely for our good. They offer not just a prescription for parts of our ailing economy, but a new vision of what 'consumerism' can be: not just a form of slavery to objects, but a thing in itself positive, progressive and pleasure-giving." -- Adam Gopnik, author of Paris to the Moon and Through the Children's Gate "Much of what we most value is created with other people, through relationships. Friendship, care, love, recognition are not delivered to us in a package. That's why What's Mine Is Yours charting Collaborative Consumption is such a vital guide to how we can live more successfully. " - Charles Leadbeater, author of We-Think

Kurzbeschreibung

In the 20th century humanity consumed products faster than ever, but this way of living is no longer sustainable. This new and important book shows how technological advances are driving forms of 'collaborative consumption' which will change forever the ways in which we interact both with businesses and with each other. The average lawn mower is used for four hours a year. The average power drill is used for only twenty minutes in its entire lifespan. The average car is unused for 22 hours a day, and even when it is being used there are normally three empty seats. Surely there must be a way to get the benefit out of things like mowers, drills and even cars, without having to carry the huge up-front costs of ownership? There is indeed. Collaborative consumption is not just a buzzword, it is a new win-win way of life. This insightful and thought-provoking new book by Rachel Botsman and Roo Rogers is an important and fast-moving survey of the dramatic changes we are seeing in the way we consume products. Many of us are familiar with freecycle, eBay, couchsurfing and Zipcar. But these are just the beginning of a new phenomenon. Rachel Botsman and Roo Rogers have interviewed business leaders and opinion formers around the world to draw together the many strands of Collaborative Consumption into a coherent and challenging argument to show that the way we did business and consumerism in the 20th century is not the way we will do it in the 21st century.

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Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
In einer Welt die bis zum Hals in einer ökonomischen und einer ökologischen Krise steckt, bietet dieses Buch einen wertvollen und erfrischenden Gegenentwurf zur traditionellen Mentalität der Konsumgesellschaft. In erster Linie ermöglicht durch die revolutionären Veränderungen die mit dem Internet einhergekommen sind, wird zu einem Umdenken angeregt - vom "Ich" zum "Wir", vom "Verbraucher" zum "Benutzer". Die präsentierten Ideen sind in keinster Weise utopisch, sondern überaus pragmatisch und in meinen Augen ein wünschenswerter und langzeitlich gar unvermeidlicher Paradigmenwechsel unserer Gesellschaft.
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Hervorragendes Buch - 2. November 2010
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Die beiden Autoren schreiben sehr gut strukturiert (Analyse, Beispiele für Lösungen, Auswirkungen) über einen Paradigmen-Wechsel in der Art des Konsums - ermöglicht durch das Internet.
In Kürze: Unser Wirtschaftssystem hat seit der industriellen Revolution - und in den letzten fünfzig Jahren nochmals beschleunigt - stark auf Maximierung des Konsums aufgebaut. Mehr und teureres Eigentum waren Statussysmbol. Die Konsequenz: Eine v.a. in Bezug auf Ressourcen sehr verschwenderische Gesellschaft, die immer noch mehr Zeug kauft, dass dann aber herumliegt, weggeworfen oder jedenfalls zu wenig genutzt wird.
Die Zukunft: Nicht mehr Eigentum steht im Mittelpunkt, sondern der Nutzen. D.h. Carsharing, Plattformen zum Tausch von nicht mehr gebrauchten Gegenständen, teure Handtaschen werden nicht mehr gekauft, sondern geliehen (diese Plattform hat es sogar in "Sex and the City" geschafft), etc. Und das geht, weil ein neuer Marktplatz - das Internet - es ohne große Transaktionskosten möglich macht.

Natürlich sehr optimistisch geschrieben, aber nicht weltfremd oder idealisierend.
Insgesamt ein Buch, dass mir jedenfalls sehr viel Wissensgewinn gebracht hat.
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Ways to Share That Benefit You and Others 18. September 2010
Von Kare Anderson - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
One Saturday a friend who lives on Nob Hill in S.F. drove a zipcar over to visit me in Sausalito. He was eager to tell me about his trip to Istanbul, paid for by renting out his spare bedroom. Earlier that morning, via a freecycle posting, a stranger picked up some clay pots I'd set out by my garage so he could make a deck garden. Our apparently different actions are, in fact, part of a trend that Roos Rogers and Rachel Botsman dub collaborative consumption in their book, What's Mine is Yours.

Feeling pinched for money? Hate waste? Want to get to know more of your neighbors? These are just some of the reasons that might motivate you to discover fresh methods to save and to share that can also enrich your life - with others.

From bartering to exchanging, fixing, giving away, renting or more efficiently using what you have, this book is the most complete (and lively) resource I've found. You'll not only read about the better-known businesses and organizations that are tapping into "collaborative consumption" like zipcar and Meetup but many lesser-known groups and methods that you might join or reinvent to adapt to your situation or interest.

They write, "The collaboration at the heart of Collaborative Consumption may be local and face-to-face, or it may use the Internet to connect, combine, form groups, and find something or someone to create "many to many" peer-to-peer interactions. Simply put, people are sharing again with their community - be it an office, a neighborhood, an apartment building, a school, or a Facebook network. But the sharing and collaboration are happening in ways and at a scale never before possible, creating a culture and economy of What's Mine is Yours."

Collaborative Consumption appears in three "systems" suggest the authors, product service systems, redistribution markets and collaborative lifestyles. The underlying principles that enable them are idling capacity, critical mass, belief in the commons and trust between strangers.

In keeping with a book on collaboration the authors seemingly productively co-wrote this book. You can read about the factors in our relatively recent history that caused Americans to shop as a hobby, often beyond our mean or needs and throw away or store our extra stuff (Americans average more than four credit cards per person while Europeans get by with 0.23 per person)- or you can jump to the many interesting characters, services, methods and stories in the rise of our collaborative consumption.

Some of my favorite stories are about business people who made dramatic changes on how they operated their business such as Ray Anderson who had a "conversion experience" after reading my friend Paul Hawken's book, The Ecology of Commerce The Ecology of Commerce: A Declaration of Sustainability, and transformed his firm, "the world's largest commercial carpet company" into "the first fully sustainable industrial enterprise." There are many fascinating back stories on how company founders backed into starting their business after personally seeing a need to reduce waste or save money - or others desire to share.

As someone who has had a long interest in collaboration I was delighted to learn how many more clever methods people are inventing to get along well on less, often through the use of collaborative technology. For example, I've been a longtime fan and user of freecyle, Zipcar, Netflix and Zilok (and was building up the nerve to try CouchSurfing or Airbnb) yet I'd not heard of many of the others including Snapgoods, SwapTree, SmartBike, TechShop, HearPlanet, iLetYou, SolarCity, UsedCardboardBoxes or OurGoods.

Perhaps like me, you'll finish this book convinced that sharing in all its forms is a major trend - and not just for the frugal or the greenies. Further you'll have specific ideas about why and how to share, exchange, rent, swap or ensure that the things you no longer want get into the hands of those who do. After you've read this book visit Shareable and see more stories to inspire you about how we are becoming more inventive about sharing the more we connect with each other about it. Relatedly, see Clay Shirky's Cognitive SurplusCognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age, Kevin Kelly's What Technology WantsWhat Technology Wants, Peter Block's The Abundant CommunityThe Abundant Community: Awakening the Power of Families and Neighborhoods and Delivering Happiness Delivering Happiness: A Path to Profits, Passion, and Purpose
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The Future That Already Exists 21. November 2010
Von Peter Morville - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
This book provides a glimpse of the unevenly distributed future that already exists today. In other words, collaborative consumption is a phenomenon that will change the way we all live and work. This isn't just a technology-driven trend, although the Internet and ubiquitous computing are part of the picture. We're also in the early stages of a social transformation with respect to what people want. What's Mine Is Yours is filled with great examples, and the authors do a nice job of tying them together into an uplifting and important story. I highly recommend this book!
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A travel guide to a new commercial landscape 16. September 2010
Von Brett Rolfe - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Ever now and then - not often - a book comes along that captures nascent trends that are going to effect us all before we know it, and lays those trends out with clarity and insight. 'The Cluetrain Manifesto' was such a book, as was 'Convergence Culture'. This year it appears we are blessed with two such reads - Clay Shirky's 'Cognitive Surplus', and this wonderful exploration of new (or re-emerging) forms of collaborative living.

The book is nicely structured and reads well, with an anecdotal style which clearly shows the huge amount of research that went into the project, drawing on an impressive range of case studies to make a powerful argument.

If the book has one failing it may be that, like so many 'business books', some people may overlook it as not for them. This would be a great pity, as the issues it deals with are critical for all of us - whether as inspiration for a collaborative dot com start up, or to help us navigated the increasing array of traded, swapped and shared products and services around us.

Buy it. Read it. Pass it on.
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