Institutional Logics at Play in a Mobility-as-a-Service Ecosystem
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
2.1. Institutional Logics Theory
2.2. Dominant Logics
3. Method
3.1. Case Description
3.2. Data Collection
4. Analysis and Discussion
4.1. Vision and Scope
4.2. Business Model
4.3. Influencing Travel Behavior through LinMaaS
4.4. Collaboration and Stakeholders’ Roles
4.5. Handling Uncertainty: Experimenting, Testing, and Learning
5. Conclusions
5.1. Practical Recommendations
5.2. Future Research Avenues
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Examples of Documents Analyzed
Document | Description | Pages |
---|---|---|
The municipality’s press release “Nytt multireskort ska få ännu fler att resa hållbart” (April 2018) | Announcement about the test project in the winter of 2017–2018 called the “Multi-Travel Card,” offered to residents of a new neighborhood in Linköping. It can be considered the beginning of MaaS in Linköping. It involved the public transportation company, the municipal parking company, and a carsharing company. | 2 |
The Swedish Energy Agency’s press release: “New innovation competition seeks world’s best mobility solutions” (October 2018) | Presentation of the Sustainable Mobility-as-a-Service (SMAAS) competition, initiated by the Minister for Policy Coordination and Energy in the framework of “A Challenge from Sweden” (co-developed by the Swedish Energy Agency, and Swedish Incubators & Science Parks)—three winners would share a prize fund of EUR 150,000. The Swedish Energy Agency also announced that it will be launching a call for project funding after the competition winners are announced in 2019. | 2 |
The public transportation company’s “Personas” (November 2018) | Presentation of four customer profiles based on different travel needs and psycho-demographic characteristics, identified by the public transportation company—which are used as input to the design of Linköping MaaS. | 10 |
SMAAS Video presentation (February 2019) | Presentation of Linköping’s participation in the SMAAS competition—recorded on video. Different local stakeholders involved (e.g., the Science Park, the municipal housing company, the public transport company) describe their motivations for participating in such projects, and their future hopes concerning shared mobility in the city/region. | N/A |
The Swedish Energy Agency’s call for applications for MaaS: “Var med och testa hållbara mobilitetslösningar för en snabbare marknadsintroduktion” (March 2019) | Call for funding (max SEK 15 million) for an accelerated market introduction from the Swedish Energy Agency inviting actors from the sustainability and innovation sector to test and develop MaaS projects between Nov. 2019 and Dec. 2020. Project goals should include digitally combining diverse mobility services in one user-friendly platform for daily travel needs, collecting feedback from at least 5000 test-users and designing a sustainable business model that makes such MaaS trials scalable. | 17 |
Nordic Mobility Innovation Platform (NMIP) report (April 2019) | A report that shows how the IT startup and other mobility actors from the Nordic countries (e.g., UbiGo), are engaged in establishing common and open technological and commercial standards for MaaS, enabling roaming between MaaS operators (i.e., MaaS users being able to use the same app between locations). | 37 |
“Linköping MoU” (May 2019) | “Memorandum of Understanding” between the core actors of LinMaaS (i.e., the municipality and municipal companies, the IT startup, and the public transportation provider)—a document that formally concretizes the respective actors’ interest in applying to The Swedish Energy Agency’s call for funding. | 2 |
LinMaaS project presentation (June 2019) | Presentation prepared by the project coordinator for the pre-application workshop at the municipality. It shows the application draft in terms of project objectives, actors already involved/interested, other potential partners, structure of governance (ownership, core group) and contracts, timeline (Nov. 2019–Jun. 2021) and milestones, as well as 10 working packages. It identifies the municipal real estate company as the future owner of LinMaaS and thus the leading organization in the project. | 14 |
”Bilaga 1_Maas_ecosystem_ plus projektorganisation_Linköping” (June 2019) | Application appendices to the Swedish Energy Agency’s call, showing the project ecosystem of actors and the governance structure. Stakeholders are differentiated between “Main partners” (i.e., the municipality, IT startup, municipal real estate and housing companies, public transportation companies, and the Science Park), “Mobility providers”, “Partners” (e.g., research institutions and regional authorities), “Private sector employers”, “Learning partners” (i.e., other municipalities), and “Related initiatives”. Two project leaders/coordinators are also identified. | 3 |
“Genomförande Linköping MaaS_rev” (November 2019) | Detailed content, timeline, budget, and actor’s involvement/responsibilities for the 12 work packages for LinMaaS: 1, Start-up phase (5% total budget); 2, Service Design (6%); 3, Marketing (3%); 4, Prepare the IT startup’s integrated platform for Linköping (8%); 5, Integration with the public transportation company (6%); 6, On-demand ridesharing deployment (e.g., DRT services) (8%); 7, Integration of P2P carsharing (24%); 8, Integration of rental vehicles (e.g., e-bikes) (10%); 9, Integration of parking other mobility services (e.g., “park & ride” routes) (6%); 10, Evaluation (10%); 11, Operation of Linköping MaaS (7%); and 12, Knowledge building and user engagement (7%). | 5 |
Application decision (December 2019) | Project grant approval from the Swedish Energy Agency stating, that SEK 6.3 million is provided in support of the implementation of LinMaaS between Dec. 2019 and Jun. 2021. It indicates how the funding is shared between the project stakeholders: IT startup (42%), P2P carsharing (21%), municipality (13%), research institutions (16%), municipal real estate company (4%), public transportation company (3%), Science Park (1%), and municipal housing company (0%). | 15 |
P2P carsharing startup’s press release (December 2019) | Press release about LinMaaS being funded, in which the P2P carsharing startup’s CEO highlights how LinMaaS constitutes a way of distinguishing Linköping from its current geographical area. | 2 |
6 Marketing Project Reports (January 2020) | Student reports (6) from a Master’s course (autumn 2019) in marketing at Linköping University, where primary data (surveys and interviews) from consumers were collected and analyzed to better understand their needs and expectations, the customer satisfaction criteria and loyalty drivers, and the barriers of adoption for car sharing services, e-bike services, public transport services, e-scooter services, and MaaS in general. | 168 |
“Linköping MaaS till möte 200117.pdf” (January 2020) | Presentation prepared by the project coordinator for the internal kickoff—attended by representative(s) from all project’s stakeholders (cf. pre-application workshop, June 2019). The presentation provides a summary of the history behind LinMaaS (e.g., the SMAAS competition), the vision that the project aims to achieve (i.e., “from motorist to multimodalist”), a presentation of the project goals, partners, key learnings from IDEO’s (2018) report (i.e., customer segments), the 12 work packages, and the potential branding (i.e., “LinGo”). | 54 |
“Projektgruppsmöte 1 200117 Anteckningar.docx” (January 2020) | Project kickoff minutes that highlights what has been discussed and decided by the kickoff meeting participants: the particular relevance of developing a long-term business model so that LinMaaS continues to operate after the project ends; the interest from other cities (Dublin, Reykjavik) to follow LinMaaS and why LinMaaS is part of the Nordic Mobility Innovation Platform (i.e., “LinMaaS as a blueprint for MaaS across Europe”); how the project will be organized (i.e., sharepoint) and who belongs to the core group (i.e., one representative from each of the nine organizations that received funding) which aims to meet weekly; how the work packages will be organized and implemented; reflections upon the suggested brand name (“LinGo”), proposing that it cannot be scaled regionally; and the planning of a public kickoff in Mar. 2020. | 6 |
“Idea Hunt SWOT” (January 2020) | Analysis of Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats (SWOT) for LinMaaS, prepared by consultants for the work package 3 (Marketing). This analysis was used at the municipal real estate company as a common starting point regarding how to address challenges. | 1 |
“Integrationsmöte ShareBike” (January 2020) | Meeting notes from the work package 8, highlighting that the e-bike service is changing its technical platform provider, and that there are several issues (e.g., API) when it comes to integrating the service to the IT startup’s platform. | 2 |
“AP2 meeting 6th Feb 2020” (February 2020) | Minutes from the first workshop for the work package 2 (service design) summarizing the discussion between the eight participants regarding the “soft launch” of the beta version (planned for June 2020), the target groups based on the public transportation company’s Personas (2018), IDEO’s report (2018) and InterMetra’s report (2018), and the working methods (i.e., weekly meeting) and the next steps. | 2 |
“Coregrupp möte Minnesanteckningar” (February 2020) | Meeting notes (by the project leader) from the core group weekly meeting (online). The document provides a “status update” from each work package, reflecting the reports given by each project’s actor about what has been done and what are the next steps. It also shows that the project coordinator takes the lead on several tasks, and that the municipal housing company has a new representative for LinMaaS. | 2 |
Idea Hunt’s Kick-off Agenda (March 2020) | Presentation of the public kickoff’s agenda prepared by Idea Hunt that shows the objectives of the workshop: reflection on the customer journey (i.e., signing-up, planning, booking, paying, traveling, and after-sales) for LinMaaS’ target groups (i.e., commuters, and daily travels), and preparation of a to-do list of tasks for each step of the customer journey. | 10 |
Idea Hunt’s workshop Results “Kundresa-Prio-Behov” (March 2020) | Results from the public kickoff’s workshop on the customer journey: a list of 53 customer needs at the different steps of the customer journey, which are prioritized from the customers’ perspectives. These results highlight the importance of ease of use, convenience, rapidity, and reliability for the design of the app and its functionalities. | 3 |
P2P carsharing startup’s presentation (March 2020) | Presentation of the P2P carsharing startup by its CEO in preparation of the public kickoff. It presents the app functionalities and keyless technology, shows the results from the current implementation (i.e., 3,799 registered users, 448 car rentals), the exponential business development predictions for the next 8 months, the goals for 2020 (e.g., decrease customer acquisition costs, increase utilization rate, i.e., bookings of cars available, increase revenues, decrease insurance costs, secure financing, launch in Linköping and another large Swedish city), a comparison with the competition (e.g., Heap, Sunfleet, Snappcar, Gomore), and the vision for 2025 (i.e., 1.8 million active users, 315,000 cars available, SEK 16 billion turnover). The presentation also highlights the role of LinMaaS for the startup (i.e., expansion in Linköping). | 16 |
IT statup’s presentation (March 2020) | Presentation of the IT startup’s expertise in MaaS and technical functionalities of its white-label platform, prepared for the public kickoff prepared by its Chief Product Officer. It is focused on the customer journey of MaaS app users (i.e., discovery, access, travel, and after) for different mobility needs (i.e., regional trips vs. intercity travels, business travelers vs. families). | 13 |
“Linköpings kommun_mobilitetsköp.pptx” (March 2020) | Presentation prepared for the public kickoff about the municipality’s regulations (legislation, procurement) and plans for parking spaces management and infrastructure in Linköping, and the concept of “Mobility Purchase” (i.e., property owners pay a fixed amount per reduced parking space, which grants access to LinMaaS to their tenants)—a first draft of LinMaaS business model to generate revenues. | 11 |
Public Transportation Company’s presentation (March 2020) | Presentation of the public transportation company and of its role for LinMaaS prepared for the public kickoff. It highlights that 60% of public transport services are financed from taxes, the goal of increasing travels by busses and trains, instead of by personal cars, the issues with First-Mile/Last-Mile in traveling, and the upcoming challenges related to integration with the IT startup’s platform and API development. | 4 |
”Intentionsavtal (utkast) LOI leverantörer MaaS” (March 2020) | Draft of the contract prepared by the municipal real estate company for interested mobility service providers to integrate LinMaaS as partners. It shows that both parties would commit to communication about LinMaaS, to document the integration (e.g., API) for the purpose of standardization, and to engage with the fossil-free goal through shared services—for a minimum period of 6 months (renewable). | 2 |
“Kommunikationsplan MaaS Linköping” (April 2020) | Communication plan for LinMaaS (e.g., channels, milestones, message tones, press-release strategy, etc.), including the presentation of the five different types of users (“personas”)—developed by a communication manager at the municipal real estate company. | 8 |
“Intern möte Minnesanteckningar” (April 2020) | Meeting notes (by the project leader) from a meeting about LinMaaS. The document summarizes the “status update” (e.g., e-bike service and parking apps, the business model development), what has been discussed by the meeting’s participants, and what are the next steps in the project and for the work packages in which the municipal real estate company is involved (3, 8, 9, and 11). | 2 |
“LinMaaS use cases ext” (April 2020) | Shared working document within the project’s core group members supporting discussions on the design of the customer journey (i.e., from discovery, to booking, to traveling, etc.) and capped-pricing for the five different types of users (personas), and how to move forward towards the launch of a pilot app by June 2020. | 43 |
“Linköping Maas June trial scope” (May 2020) | Document prepared by the IT startup showing the scope of the beta lunch (planned for 15 June 2020): discussing which features (i.e., registration, “map discovery” and routing, purchase) and mobility services (e.g., P2P carsharing, public transport, and e-bike services) should be included. | 1 |
“Customer setup and White Label Material Guidelines 2020” (May 2020) | Document prepared by the IT startup for the municipality and the real estate company (within work package 3 on Marketing and user engagement), presenting what is needed in terms of graphical identification (logo, images, etc.) and other guidelines to set up the app (e.g., privacy policy, external customer support [InterCom] and payment service [Stripe] accounts, etc.). | 15 |
“Statusuppdatering AP2” (May 2020) | Documents (6) prepared (bi-weekly between 9 March and 18 May) by the IT startup to inform and update the core group of the progress from participants in work package 2 (service design). | 6 |
Presse release “Dukaten satsar vidare inom mobilitet” (June 2020) | Press release from the municipal real estate company about its position in the (sustainable) mobility market, identifying itself as a mobility company and not a parking company, and that promotes LinMaaS and the new hire of a dedicated manager for shared mobility projects. | 1 |
“SilverRail presentation of Flow (26 June)” (July 2020) | Presentation of SilverRail, the API content provider for SJ, at a workshop with LinMaaS core group, for a potential integration of SJ (i.e., the national rail company) into LinMaaS. | 6 |
Press Release “Delning är framtiden” (July 2020) | Press release from the municipal housing company about the testbed “Share” in a new housing area of Linköping, led by the New Production Project Manager. | 3 |
“Zapp Graphic Profile” (October 2020) | The graphic profile of LinMaaS and suggested branding as “Zapp” proposed by the ad agency consulted by the municipal real estate company: logo, colors, fonts, slogan (i.e., “Zapp your way there”, “Going there has never been easier”), layouts, pictograms (i.e., emoticons), illustrations (e.g., app), identity pictures, and examples of marketing communications. | 49 |
“Hållbart Resande” (October 2020) | The municipality’s webpage and sub-webpages dedicated to presenting the different initiatives for sustainable traveling (e.g., Green Travel Plans), in line with the sustainability goals of traffic planning (e.g., reduce from 60% to 40% the proportion of travels by car by 2030). | 26 |
Zapp Presentation and Q&A (November 2020) | Presentation of LinMaaS as “Zapp” by the project coordinator, a representative from the ad agency and the LinMaaS’ communication manager. It provides a report on the updated vision for the project, the current progress (e.g., current mobility actors involved in discussions) and challenges at hand, the graphic profile and communication plan, and an updated timeline with a beta launch to test-users in early 2021 and a project end in Dec. 2021 (no longer Jun. 2021). It also highlighted that the ad agency also works for the public transportation provider on employer branding and for the municipal real estate company on its parking and e-bike services. | 42 |
“LinMaaS-Affärsmodell UTKAST” (December 2020) | Presentation of the Business Model (prepared with the assistance of the MaaS consultant) showing the general business strategy for the next 4 years, the division of roles and tasks among stakeholders, the structure of contracts and agreements between stakeholders, the forecasts for costs and revenues until 2024, and a presentation of the principles for “Mobility Purchase”. | 33 |
6 Marketing Project reports (January 2021) | Student reports (6) from a Master course (autumn 2020) in marketing at Linköping University where primary data (surveys and interviews) from consumers were collected and analyzed to better understand aspects of brand image and communication strategy for Linköping MaaS; the drivers and barriers of MaaS adoption, and the factors driving customer satisfaction and loyalty with diverse shared mobility services. | 178 |
“Trendrapport Mobility Insights #3” (February 2021) | Collection of newspaper articles from Dagens Industri that map, identify, and analyze trends and the development of the Swedish MaaS market. | 44 |
“Features for customer journey phases.xlsx” (April 2021) | Shared Excel file (i.e., live document, last updated: 13 April 2021) keeping track of project milestones, budget/costs, goals, tasks, current status, and planned development stages regarding technical integration, marketing, business model development, etc., Updated regularly, mostly by the IT startup representatives. | 90 |
Appendix B. Semi-Structured Interview Guide
- Tell us a bit about your company and what it offers.What is your role at your company? (i.e., position, how long you have worked, previous experience related to a mobility project).
- What is your role in the Linköping Mobility-as-a-Service (LinMaaS) project?
- Why do you think Linköping has the potential (is a good place) for the development of MaaS? What are the reasons that makes launching LinMaaS a viable project?
- What were the reasons for your company’s decision to participate in LinMaaS?What problems do you hope to solve with MaaS? How do you hope to benefit from MaaS?
- Could you go through the process from the beginning to the end for such projects you are involved in? What is the first step? Do you need to establish a vision/scenario?
- How did your initial vision change over time, when you compare the start of the project to now? Who and what was the reason for the changes?
- Briefly describe how collaboration within the project works. What were your experiences when bringing multiple stakeholders together?Main challenge(s)? How could this/these situation(s) be handled differently?
- Who would you consider to be the most influential stakeholder to increase collaboration within the project?
- With whom have you collaborated the most during the project? Why?
- What would you say are most important success factors to realize such a project?
- What future steps are necessary to successfully launch LinMaaS?What is the ideal future scenario for the project?
- Would it be possible to copy/paste LinMaaS to another city—how would you do it and what would be the challenges?
- What should other municipalities planning to implement MaaS in the future think about?
- Would having a ”finished product” help you; a “best product showcase” for MaaS?
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State Logic | Market Logic | Sustainability Logic | Experimental Logic | Service Logic |
---|---|---|---|---|
Obligation to serve citizens; Accountability; Democracy; Bureaucracy. | Profit seeking; Efficiency; Performance; Competition; Value capture. | Protect the environment; Reduce consumption’s impact. | Design thinking; Innovation; Testbeds; Learning. | Service provision; Non-ownership consumption; Rental business models; Value-in-use. |
Organization | Interviewee * | Involvement | Interview #1 | Interview #2 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Municipality | Municipal planner 1 | Continuous | 56 min | 75 min |
Municipal planner 2 | Minor | - | 22 min | |
Municipal planner 3 | Minor | - | 51 min | |
Municipal planner 4 | Minor | - | 39 min | |
Municipal real estate company, which operates parking in the municipality, and the e-bike sharing system | Parking company 1 | Continuous | 20 min | 44 min |
Parking company 2 | Continuous | 15 min | 53 min | |
Parking company 3 | Continuous | - | 41 min | |
Public transport company offering bus and train services in the region | Public transport 1 | Until Mar. 2021 | - | 28 min |
Public transport 2 | Until Mar. 2020 | 17 min | 57 min | |
Peer-to-peer (P2P) carsharing startup | Carsharing startup 1 | Continuous | 33 min | 56 min |
Carsharing startup 2 | Minor | - | 43 min | |
IT startup providing MaaS technological infrastructure | IT startup 1 | Continuous | - | 63 min |
IT startup 2 | Until Feb. 2021 | - | 47 min | |
IT startup 3 | Continuous | 30 min | - | |
Municipal housing company | Housing company 1 | Until Mar. 2020 | 18 min | 48 min |
Housing company 2 | From Mar. 2020 | - | 37 min | |
Science Park | Science Park | Minor | 20 min | - |
MaaS consultancy | MaaS consultant | Minor | - | 54 min |
State Logic | Market Logic | Sustainability Logic | Experimental Logic | Service Logic | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Municipality | X | X | X | ||
Municipal real estate company | X | X | |||
Municipal housing company | X | X | X | ||
Public transport company | X | X | X | ||
IT startup | X | X | |||
P2P carsharing startup | X | X |
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Guyader, H.; Nansubuga, B.; Skill, K. Institutional Logics at Play in a Mobility-as-a-Service Ecosystem. Sustainability 2021, 13, 8285. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13158285
Guyader H, Nansubuga B, Skill K. Institutional Logics at Play in a Mobility-as-a-Service Ecosystem. Sustainability. 2021; 13(15):8285. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13158285
Chicago/Turabian StyleGuyader, Hugo, Brenda Nansubuga, and Karin Skill. 2021. "Institutional Logics at Play in a Mobility-as-a-Service Ecosystem" Sustainability 13, no. 15: 8285. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13158285
APA StyleGuyader, H., Nansubuga, B., & Skill, K. (2021). Institutional Logics at Play in a Mobility-as-a-Service Ecosystem. Sustainability, 13(15), 8285. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13158285