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Consumer behaviour needs to change fundamentally to ensure the successful transition to a circular economy, according to a new report.
Entitled Engaging Customers in a Circular Economy, the report presents an initial framework for organisations looking to reshape customer journeys, whether through participation in sharing models, returning packaging, repair schemes or other circular business models.
Published by the Exeter Centre for Circular Economy and business consultancy Clarasys, the report highlights the crucial role of customer behaviour in creating a less wasteful and resource intense world.
It states that the transition to a circular economy will require companies to go beyond just making new circular products and services, and take meaningful steps to change customer behaviour as well.
Companies will not only have to meet the needs of their customers, particularly regarding factors such as quality, price, convenience, identity and trust, but also be mindful of issues such as hygiene and contamination of used products, language and communication used to market new offerings, and the level of circular skills required to maintain products for longer.
Customers in turn would become stewards and maintainers of products, value and materials, creating a new relationship between producers, customers and products based on transparency, trust and emotional connection with the products they use.
Within circular economy research only around 10% of peer reviewed papers focus on ‘consumption’, ‘customers’ or ‘users’, and previous researchers propose this focus on customer experience is the missing component for companies seeking to embed circular business models.
The report is therefore aimed at organisations that want to engage in the circular economy and bring their customers on board.
By comparing typical ‘take make waste’ linear customer journeys with circular ones it outlines what a business to consumer customer journey of the future would look like, considering factors such as circular design principles, mindful consumption focused on needs, community based consumption and a greater focus on affordability to ensure products are accessible to all.
The report’s ultimate goal is to ‘enable organisations, both business to business and business to consumer, to design and embed circular journeys that are desirable for customers, and viable and feasible for the business’.
Dr Merryn Haines-Gadd, a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the University of Exeter Business School, said: ‘In a circular economy, there is an expectation and hope that customers will become stewards of products. As a result, customer journeys will evolve into continuous loops of engagement and interaction with organisations, all so we can ensure products and materials retain their value and are kept within the system.
‘So, it is vitally important we continue to understand this interplay in more detail so we can ensure the successful implementation of circular products and services.
‘We intend to continue to partner and conduct primary research with organisations and customers to further investigate circular economy friction points.’
Sam Maguire, sustainability lead at Clarasys, said: ‘At Clarasys we want to help our clients create circular customer experiences that actually work. This means fully understanding what might motivate customers to engage in a circular model and what producers need to put in place to make them work.
‘This literature review indicates some of those areas and we are very excited for further collaboration with Exeter on a primary research programme where we can find out more with exciting providers of circular business models.’
Read the report here
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