Hope Labor or
Collaborative Production
What are the
ethical implications?
Nowadays collaborative production between
corporations and fans, who usually follow them through social media, is
becoming a common ground for companies to get ideas directly from their
consumers. For Fournier (2019), “this
collaboration can be an excellent way to discover new market opportunities, push
product branding in new directions, or establish a presence in a completely new
area.” However, who is actually carrying on all the field work here? What is
the real purpose behind this type of collaboration? “Now one’s initial reaction
to this process could be that it’s a corporatization of the content,
exploitation of workers, or a corporation attempting to acquire content for
very little cost”
If one’s
initial reaction to co-creation is framed within the University of Sydney’s primary
approach, what does it really entail? “Customer co-creation refers to inviting
stakeholders (usually customers) to participate in a design or problem-solving
process to produce a mutually valued outcome”
|
Criteria |
Company |
Case 1 |
Corporatization of Content |
IKEA |
Case 2 |
Worker Exploitation |
DeWalt |
Case 3 |
Acquisition of Content for very low cost |
Unilever |
Corporatization of Content
According to
the IKEA business idea
One’s initial
reaction to Co-Create IKEA’s platform is that the enterprise is intending to
corporatizate content generated by their platform users. This process implemented
by IKEA can be labeled as hope labor because it is an “un- or
under-compensated work carried out in the present, often for experience or
exposure”
Worker
Exploitation
“DEWALT is out there on the jobsite
learning what works and what doesn’t so [they] can make it all work for the
professional”
One’s
initial reaction to DeWalt’s Insight Community is that the company is doing some
sort of “workers exploitation”. This community implemented by DeWalt can also be
labeled as hope labor because it “functions as a viable coping strategy
for navigating the uncertainties of the contemporary labor economy, yet it does
so without the risks of associated with related processes, such as ‘venture
labor’”
Acquisition of Content for very low cost
“Unilever is one of the world’s largest
consumer goods companies, owning over 400 well-recognized brands, including Dove,
Lipton, Best Foods, and many more”
One’s
initial reaction to Unilever’s Open Innovation platform is that the company is acquiring
new content at a very low cost. This platform implemented by Unilever can also be
labeled as hope labor because it “is yet another means of valorizing
leisure spaces that captures digital ‘workers’ in relations not unlike those
defined by traditional labor arrangements”
What is
important to understand here is that collaborative production is not wrong!
These are common practices carried out by companies such as the ones used here
for the sake of this ethical exercise. They are here stated as initial
reactions to what these enterprises do with their stakeholders, and they do not
necessarily mean that the statements made here actually represent the current
state of affairs in each of the companies mentioned. From a mere ethical
perspective what one can see not necessarily reflect what the collaborators
feel about “working” with these companies, and they may feel more than rewarded
in what each company does. Through the eyes of hope labor, something seems to
be happening here because experts “critique the harnessing of users’
uncompensated productivity -their ‘free labor, for the ends of capital
accumulation’”
References
DeWalt. (2019). Innovation that Matters. Recuperado el 28 de August de 2020, de
My.DeWalt.Global/: https://my.dewalt.global/dewalt-dna/innovation-technology
Fournier, A. (2019, March 20). Customer Co-Creation
Examples: 10 Companies Doing it Right. Retrieved August 27, 2020, from
Braineet: https://www.braineet.com/blog/co-creation-examples/
IKEA. (2019-2020). The IKEA vision and business idea.
Retrieved August 28, 2020, from About.IKEA.Com:
https://about.ikea.com/en/who-we-are/our-roots/the-ikea-vision-and-business-idea
Kuehn, K., & Corrigan, F. (2013). Hope Labor: The Role
of Employment Prospects in Online Social. The Political Economy of
Communication, 9-25. Retrieved August 27, 2020, from
https://polecom.org/index.php/polecom/article/view/9/116
Universtiy of Sydney. (2020). ETHICAL SOCIAL MEDIA. Retrieved
August 25, 2020, from FutureLearn.Com:
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/ethical-social-media/1/steps/824148
Hope Labor or Collaborative Production by Jonathan Acuña on Scribd
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