The New Fronteer Office – what a joy

Posted: January 17th, 2011 | Author: | Filed under: Amsterdam, NDSM-wharf, Uncategorized | No Comments »

We moved Jan 3 2011 to our new office at the NDSM – Mediawharf in Amsterdam. We feel lucky to be part of a special Amsterdam / International vibe where a few of the most iconic brands have set up shop. Our neighbours include the very-Dutch HEMA, MTV, RedBull, IDTV and many others.

We like you to come over for a cup of coffee and have a chat. Take one of the two ferry’s or get there by car. Come on in and see our new homebase which we have been carefully decorating, matching our ambition: becoming one of the best strategy agencies, with a personal approach. Our office part and the part which we use for our sessions should radiate that anyone is welcome and the atmosphere should invite everybody to think freely, creatively and constructively.

Our new address: NDSM-plein 20. 1033WB. Amsterdam.

Stay tuned for more. For example our new North by Northwest website, which is where you can see more of the space we use and rent out for sessions.


A sneak preview on Chesbrough’s new book: Open Services Innovation

Posted: November 17th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Chesbrough, co-creation, open innovation, services | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

From the author of Open Innovation we will get a new book – bigger and better than the previous one. It is due Jan 2011. I can’t wait. Here is a sneak preview from opensource.com. Pre-order the book here.

To escape the commodity trap, Chesbrough says that you must:

- Wrap services around your products

- Turn products into solutions

- Co-create innovations with your customers

- Use openness to get more from specialization

- Build platforms to attract others to add to your solutions.


The Empathy Monitor 2010 – Results and Reactions

Posted: June 29th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Empathy | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

ikeaFronteer Strategy and Ruigrok Netpanel have launched the Dutch Empathie Monitor – all results can be found on the website. It ranks major Dutch brands on perceived empathy, attractiveness, innovativeness and approachability levels. The research has been done with 1700 Dutch people 18+. Why have we done this? We believe empathy (the awareness and understanding of other people’s feelings and motives) will be one of the big business drivers of the future. All brand touchpoints are moments of truth, brand exposure, innovation opportunities and moments where you can show empathy. And – to our surprise – a Swedish brand has won. IKEA is leading the pack. In the top-3 we see Albert Heijn, the leading Dutch supermarket, and Bol.com, the little Dutch brother of Amazon.

We ate now almost a week after the launch and the reactions have been great. People have recognised the importance of empathy. Publications and debates online and lively Twitter exchanges are for us confirmations that empathy has value. Also, the monitor has been published on the ‘Ranking the Brands‘ site. The next step for us now is to help clients to understand empathy and what it means for their businesses. How do you drive empathy? How do you develop a touchpoints strategy? How can we innovate at all touchpoints? Those are questions we like to answer.

Feel free to contact us for more information.


10 Green Rules when it comes to sustainable strategies

Posted: June 22nd, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: co-creation, public speaking, Rooftop Garden | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

brand-new-design-eventLast month I had the great pleasure of presenting our vision on sustainability & co-creation at an event organised by Brand New Design – one of the leading packaging design agencies in The Netherlands. Brand New had gathered 101 inspiring examples of sustainable packaging from around the world. The 101 examples will travel Europe the coming months and hopefully will be available in a book later this year. Adformatie also covered the event (in Dutch). Here is the PDF.

We believe that the sustainability challenge is too big and too complex for anyone to tackle alone. There is no right or wrong, there are merely data points, opinions, visions and personal experiences. What is important then for any company or brand is to work together with experts, partners, suppliers and customers to find out how sustainability relates to their brand promise and business models.

The presentation that I gave is available on SlideShare. In it we make a case for co-creation being a method to create sustainable strategies. Our Rooftop Garden sustainable co-creation tool would be an example of that. Enjoy our presentation and please give us your feedback.

And for those of you who want instant satisfaction: read the rest of this entry for the 10 Green Rules

Read the rest of this entry »


There are 4 competitive Co-creation strategies. What’s yours?

Posted: June 7th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: co-creation, strategy | No Comments »

fronteer-strategy-co-creation-maturity-framework-small11If you want to know whether you can jump right into co-creation or whether you’d rather wait a bit: do our test. It is very simple. You basically have to answer two questions:

- Is my company, brand or organisation experienced in co-creation or any form of open innovation?

- Is my industry known to co-creation or any form of open innovation?

The results are below > What should you do? Read the rest of this entry »


10 Insights from a Cambridge Open Innovation seminar – and particularly from Unilever’s approach

Posted: April 22nd, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: co-creation, open innovation | Tags: , , , , , | 2 Comments »

CambridgeOpen Innovation is hot. Companies, organizations and practitioners all over the world are doing it or experimenting with it. At the Institute for Manufacturing in Cambridge some 20 people gathered for a one-day exchange of experiences and viewpoints. Open Innovation managers were present from amongst others Unilever, GlaxoSmithKline, Akzo Nobel, Premier Foods, BAT – as well as people from IfM and NESTA – the UK 100 man-strong innovation agency.

This is what I have learned: Read the rest of this entry »


Fronteer Presents: Co-creation Crash Course 2010

Posted: January 26th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Amsterdam, co-creation, crash course, Event, Uncategorized, Whitepaper | Tags: , , | 1 Comment »

crash-course1Fronteer Presents: An introduction to the theory and practice of co-creation in business

Co-creation is currently one of the hottest topics in innovation and management theory, but the benefits, risks, best practices and repercussions are less than clear to many managers.

Each session will include a presentation & discussion of a recent case by one of our clients and end with informal drinks, during which you will have the opportunity to share thoughts & experiences with colleagues from other companies & industries. Register now – a limited number of seats are available per session. Mail us at events@fronteerstrategy.com

When? March 24th & 31st or April 7th
What time? 12.30 – 18.00
Where: Amsterdam centre, The Netherlands
EUR 125,-            Download the flyer here

We definitely hope to see you there.


2010 – The Year of Empathy?

Posted: January 25th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Empathy, Touchpoint | Tags: , | No Comments »

empathy2009 Has been a great year. It was the year that we were able to support our clients in many different ways. Co-creation has been one of the major project pillars in 2009 and definitely something that we will continue to work on/with in the future. Our Co-creation’ 5 Guiding Principles white paper has been downloaded tens of thousands of times already. Expert co-creation has proven to be a tool for clients to tackle the toughest strategic challenges and work with the smartest people around.

What’s next? Empathy. We at Fronteer feel that brands that are interested in the world that they’re in and understand another’s situation, feelings, and motives are the ones that will thrive in the future. I was able to deliver a presentation in december 2009 in Amsterdam on empathy. What struck me was the honest and happy reactions of the people around. It seemed to be spot on. Also, our research on the relationship between open-ness of brands and attractiveness was an eye-opener to people (as it was for us last year).

So what will we do? We will focus part of this year’s efforts on developing our knowledge on empathy. Read the rest of this entry »


The Copenhagen Co-creation Manifesto

Posted: September 23rd, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: co-creation, Copenhagen, Event, inspiration, public speaking, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

copenhagenI have seldomly experienced such a rich event as the Copenhagen Co-creation summit a few weeks ago. The level of discussions and participants was fantastic. I needed weeks to digest all the information. I am back now. What was going on? The Danish Design Association had decided to take a bold step. Why not writing a Co-creation manifesto rather than beating around the bush all the time? Let’s nail it! But we didn’t. Of course not. When you have 30 people co-creating, the answer never comes immediately. It will take some time. Some more thinking. But: I was very happy with the definition my group came up with after the sessions:

- Co-creation unlocks collectivy creativity of people to create deeply relevant solutions -

It might sounds a bit dreamy, but so then the event was. We dreamt about a future world where co-creation would tap into the unlimited resource of collective global brainpower. New solutions would create far better worlds and would end the one-way consumption currently going on.

My conclusion after the event was: yes, co-creation is very difficult – and especially because of how organisations are structured right now – but it is a movement that cannot be stopped. There is no way back. We are all opening up and will refuse to close again.

Read the Manifesto and watch the great video.


The 1% rule in mass-customisation

Posted: September 1st, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: 1%, brand development, co-creation, open innovation, Uncategorized | No Comments »

1percent-ruleI was quoted the other day in Dutch newspaper ‘De Pers’. I argued that the 1% principle (1% of each community is a ‘creator’) also holds for mass-customisation. Only the real affecionados are interested in tweaking and personalising their favourite products and brands. However, the generated buzz affects all consumers. The other 99%.

Here is what I said:

“Volgens merkenexpert Martijn Pater van Fronteer Strategy is de groep consumenten die ‘customizet’ relatief klein, maar gaat er een gigantisch marketingeffect van uit. ‘Wij hebben onderzoek gedaan naar het effect van personaliseren op het merk. Daaruit blijkt dat het merk er een open en toegankelijk imago van krijgt, als innovatief wordt gezien en daardoor populairder wordt. Het effect slaat dus over op het hele merk.’ Hij wijst op een slimme actie van Nike ID dat vorig jaar voor de wedstrijd Arsenal-Manchester United bezoekers van zijn website de schoenen van spelers als Wayne Rooney en Cesc Fabregas liet ontwerpen.”