Circular Project Selection: How Companies Can Evaluate Circular Innovation Projects
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“Transition from our current resource intensive economic growth model to a resource efficient growth model, to a circular economy (CE), is not only absolutely necessary; it is actually inevitable for all our economies.”[1]
2. Theoretical Background
2.1. The Concept of a Circular Economy
2.2. Decision Making in Innovation Management
2.3. Evaluation Criteria in Circular Innovation Management
3. Research Method
4. Results
4.1. Evaluation Criteria for Circular Project Selection
4.1.1. Structure of the Criteria Framework
4.1.2. Criteria of the Dimension Performance
4.1.3. Criteria of the Dimension Ease of Implementation
4.1.4. Summarizing Analysis of Evaluation Criteria
4.2. Context and Process of Circular Project Selection
5. Discussion
- Top management should take a CE framework decision at the beginning of the innovation process.
- For circular idea generation, cross-functional collaboration and the involvement of external stakeholders are advisable.
- For the evaluation of circular projects, bottom-up and top-down approaches should be combined.
- Evaluation criteria must be adapted to the specific project and the firm’s corporate objectives. The criteria framework provided in this study can serve as a master list.
- The appropriate number of criteria and the level of detail depend on the type of evaluation, the evaluators, and the availability of data.
- The evaluation of circular innovation projects should be compared to other innovations and existing products, for example in a multi-criteria decision model.
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Criterion | Examples | Sources (Example) |
---|---|---|
Cost-related criteria | ||
Operating costs | R&D/technology, materials, energy, distribution, disposal, marketing | Alamerew et al. [27], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6,7], Evanschitzky et al. [75], Ghisellini et al. [5], Govindan and Hasanagic [18], Manzini and Vezzoli [85], Masi et al. [51], Mont et al. [86], Tura et al. [49], Yang and Evans [87] |
Investment costs | R&D | Ellen MacArthur Foundation [7], Masi et al. [51], Ronkainen [88], Tukker [46], Tura et al. [49] |
Financing costs/payback period | Carbonell-Foulquié et al. [89], Cooper et al. [71], Griffin and Page [90], Hart et al. [25], Linder and Williander [91], Tukker [46] | |
Special cost effects | Subsidies, environmental taxes, externalities such as damages to health | Alamerew et al. [27], Bertoni [26], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6,7], Ghisellini et al. [5] |
Revenue-related criteria | ||
Market volume/market growth | Cooper and de Brentani [76], Evanschitzky et al. [75], Hart et al. [25], Martinsuo and Poskela [92], Rochford [93], Ronkainen [88] | |
Sales potential/market share | Carbonell-Foulquié et al. [89], Dziallas and Blind [22], Hart et al. [25] | |
Pricing/willingness to pay | Bruhn and Hadwich [79], Evanschitzky et al. [75], Singhal et al. [94], Tukker [46], van Weelden et al. [95] | |
Revenue effects on other products | Cannibalization, cross-selling | Bruhn and Hadwich [79], Cooper et al. [71], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Ronkainen [88] |
Revenue stability | Bertoni [26], Neely et al. [96], Yang and Evans [87] | |
Customer-related criteria | ||
Access to new customer segments | Bertoni [26], Bruhn and Hadwich [79], Cooper and de Brentani [76], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6] | |
Customer acceptance | Quality concerns, lack of ownership | Baines et al. [58], Carbonell-Foulquié et al. [89], Govindan and Hasanagic [18], Griffin and Page [90], Hart et al. [25], Mont et al. [86], Rizos et al. [97], van Weelden et al. [95] |
Customer satisfaction/loyalty | Satisfaction of customer needs, product quality, individualized product offering | Alamerew et al. [27], Carbonell-Foulquié et al. [89], Dziallas and Blind [22], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Griffin and Page [90], Hart et al. [25], Man-zini and Vezzoli [85], Mont et al. [86], Tukker [46] |
Customer interaction/data collection | Bertoni [26], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6,7], Mont et al. [86], Tukker [46] | |
Product-related criteria | ||
Product life | Bakker et al. [98], Bocken et al. [57], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Yang and Evans [87] | |
Differentiation-related criteria | ||
Corporate image | Bruhn and Hadwich [79], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Ormazabal et al. [54] | |
Differentiation advantage | Unique selling proposition (USP), differentiation | Cooper and de Brentani [76], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Evanschitzky et al. [75], Hart et al. [25], Martinsuo and Poskela [92], Rochford [93], Ronkainen [88], Tukker [46], Yang and Evans [87] |
Innovative advantage/future potential | Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Evanschitzky et al. [75], Mont et al. [86] | |
Competitor-related criteria | ||
Competitive advantage | Alamerew et al. [27], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [7], Griffin and Page [90], Manzini and Vezzoli [85], Martinsuo and Poskela [92] | |
Risk of imitation/substitution | Reaction of competitors, patentability | Bruhn and Hadwich [79], Carbonell-Foulquié et al. [89], Cooper et al. [71], Cooper and de Brentani [76] |
Pressure on prices and terms | Bruhn and Hadwich [79], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6] | |
Employee-related criteria | ||
Employee satisfaction | Dziallas and Blind [22], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Yang and Evans [87] | |
Business risks | ||
Cost and revenue risks | Probability of commercial success, warranties, resource price volatility | Cooper et al. [71], de Jesus and Mendonça [47], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Linder and Williander [91], Martinsuo and Poskela [92], Mont et al. [86], Shahbazi et al. [50] |
Extent of damage in case of failure | Expert-based criterion | |
Other economic risks | Natural disasters | Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Mont et al. [86] |
Resource availability | ||
Availability of raw materials | Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Mont et al. [86], Tura et al. [49] | |
Availability of know-how | Cooper and de Brentani [76], Dziallas and Blind [22], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6], Shahbazi et al. [50], Sharma et al. [99], Tukker [46] | |
Availability of human resources | Cooper et al. [71], Shahbazi et al. [50] | |
Availability of partnerships/ networks | Cooperations, retail | Bertoni [26], Bruhn and Hadwich [79], Dziallas and Blind [22], Ellen MacArthur Foundation [6,7], Mont et al. [86], Shahbazi et al. [50], Tura et al. [49] |
Availability of financing funds | Dziallas and Blind [22], Rizos et al. [97], Shahbazi et al. [50] | |
Cultural and strategic fit | ||
Mindset/corporate culture | Dziallas and Blind [22], Evanschitzky et al. [75], Kirchherr et al. [20], Pinheiro et al. [21], Shahbazi et al. [50], Tukker [46] | |
Extent of change | Bocken et al. [57], Tukker [46] | |
Strategic fit | Top-management support | Bertoni [26], Carbonell-Foulquié et al. [89], Cooper and de Brentani [76], Dziallas and Blind [22], Evanschitzky et al. [75], Govindan and Hasanagic [18], Martinsuo and Poskela [92], Mont et al. [86], Shahbazi et al. [50], Tura et al. [49] |
Implementation risks | ||
Technical feasibility | Alamerew et al. [27], Cooper et al. [71], de Jesus and Mendonça [47], Hart et al. [25], Martinsuo and Poskela [92] | |
Current/future legal situation | Alamerew et al. [27], Baines et al. [58], Cooper et al. [71], de Jesus and Mendonça [47], Dziallas and Blind [22], Masi et al. [51], Mont et al. [86], Shahbazi et al. [50], Tura et al. [49] |
Organization | Role of Interviewee | CE Experience of Company/Interviewee | Country |
---|---|---|---|
EPEA GmbH | Founder, researcher | All fields of CE | Germany |
European Union | Former EU Commissioner for the Environment | All fields of CE | Belgium |
C2C Products Innovation Institute | Founder | All fields of CE | USA |
SYSTEMIQ | Founder, researcher | All fields of CE | Germany |
Philips | Project Manager CE | Pay-per-service offers | The Netherlands |
BMW Group | Head of Electric Vehicles | Connected mobility systems | Switzerland |
BMW Group | Former Project Manager of ParkNow | Service-based mobility solution with CE effects | Germany |
BMW Group | CEO DriveNow GmbH | Sharing economy | Germany |
BSH Hausgeräte GmbH | Manager Corporate Technology, Environment, Resources | Recycling, remanufacturing, biological cycle | Germany |
BSH Hausgeräte GmbH | CEO WeWash GmbH | Sharing economy, platform economy | Germany |
Desso | Former CEO | Leasing with recycling and biological cycle | The Netherlands |
Schiphol Group | Program Coordinator Resources, Residuals, Sustainability, Innovation | Recycling, remanufacturing, reuse, extraction of biochemicals from wastewater, zero-waste-plan | The Netherlands |
Excluton B.V. | Senior Advisor Sustainability and Innovations | Cascade use across industries, recycling, remanu-facturing, reuse | The Netherlands |
Shaw Industries Group Inc. | Vice President Sustainability and Environmental Affairs | Recycling, remanufacturing, reverse logistics | USA |
Van Houtum B.V. | Quality, Health, Safety, and Environment Officer | Recycling, circular water usage, biological cycle | The Netherlands |
Gugler | Product Manager | Recycling, non-toxic design, biological cycle | Austria |
Mosa | Manager Sustainability | Design to last, cascade use across industries, recycling, remanufacturing, biological cycle | The Netherlands |
Van Puijenbroek Textiel | Product Manager | Leasing combined with recycling, biological cycle | The Netherlands |
1. Introduction: Opening Questions |
2. Context and Process of Project Selection |
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3. Evaluation Criteria |
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4. Lessons and Conclusions |
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Dimension | Criteria Group | Criterion | Circular Economy (CE) Implications (Example) | Frequency |
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Performance | Cost-related criteria | Operating costs | Lower raw material and energy costs; shorter production time; more expensive manufacturing techniques; increased costs in marketing and sales | 12 |
Investment costs | For R&D, new machinery, and CE certifications | 7 | ||
Financing costs/payback period | Due to CE long-term benefits | 5 | ||
Special cost effects | e.g., subsidies | 1 | ||
Revenue-related criteria | Pricing/willingness to pay | Pricing for circular products higher; willingness to pay for innovative, sustainable features, time saving, or adventure; no great price difference accepted by the customer | 9 | |
Sales potential/market share | Gaining market share from competitors; winning large clients | 7 | ||
Revenue effects on other products | Cannibalization; cross-selling of linear products to new customers | 5 | ||
Market volume/market growth | To be examined | 4 | ||
Revenue stability | Increased for product-service systems (PSS) | 4 | ||
Customer-related criteria | Access to new customer segments | Attracting new customers with PSS or second hand offers; new customers as example to convince others | 11 | |
Customer interaction/data collection | More active customer dialogue in systemic solutions; digitalization enabling collection of customer data such as user profiles | 11 | ||
Customer satisfaction/loyalty | Increased through higher customer interaction, long-term customer relationships, more innovativeness, and stronger USPs | 10 | ||
Customer acceptance | New way of thinking required for systemic solutions; problems with acceptance of closed cycle solutions | 9 | ||
Addressing customer needs ** | Related to changing customer behavior due to societal megatrends | 4 | ||
Individualized product offering ** | Enabled by more customer interaction and digitalization | 2 | ||
Corporate image of customer ** | Improved, especially regarding sustainability | 1 | ||
Product-related criteria | Product quality ** | Higher, e.g., through added value, more product safety | 3 | |
Scalability ** | Important to reduce costs | 2 | ||
Product life | Extended through closed cycle solutions | 2 | ||
Differentiation-related criteria | Differentiation advantage | Improved market positioning through new unique selling propositions (USPs) such as ecological product features; CE-related USPs partly not marketable | 13 | |
Innovative advantage/future potential | High innovative advantage; circular solutions enabling long-term growth and sustainable reaction to market depression | 13 | ||
Corporate image | Improved image regarding innovation and sustainability; positive impact on brand equity | 12 | ||
Coherence of sales story ** | Alleviating conflict in linear system that more product sales have negative societal and environmental impact | 3 | ||
Competitor-related criteria | Competitive advantage | Revenue side, e.g., outpace competitors with circular solutions; cost side, e.g., better asset management | 13 | |
Risk of imitation/substitution | High for many non-patentable closed cycle solutions and PSS; low for cradle-to-cradle and larger systemic solutions | 10 | ||
Pressure on prices and terms | Alleviated by closed cycle solutions | 4 | ||
Employee-related criteria | Employee satisfaction | Increased: deeper meaning of work, community feeling, higher identification with company, improved employer image; decreased: systemic solutions changing way of working and self-conception | 7 | |
Strategic effects | Cross-sector and industry dialogue ** | Improved value chain and market dialogue; legitimate industry dialogue regarding joint product standards; increased cross-sector dialogue, e.g., in CE networks | 4 | |
Development of know-how ** | Gained during innovation process, advantage for entire firm | 2 | ||
Value added for stakeholders ** | e.g., society | 1 | ||
Business risks | Cost and revenue risks | Liability and warranty risk; resource price volatility | 6 | |
Extent of damage in case of failure | Damage for overall company if circular innovation fails | 3 | ||
Other economic risks | 0 | |||
Ease of implementation | Resource availability | Partnerships/networks | Collaboration with innovation ecosystem often required; partner management as challenge | 7 |
Know-how | e.g., service-related sales experience for PSS | 5 | ||
Raw materials | Relevant due to an expected resource scarcity | 3 | ||
Access to customers and sales channels ** | Other contact persons required for systemic solutions; partly different sales channels, market access, and external organizational structures needed | 2 | ||
Human resources | Shortage of qualified labor | 2 | ||
Financing funds | Access to cash and potential investors | 1 | ||
Cultural and strategic fit | Mindset/corporate culture | Support for a CE as crucial success factor; partly venturing culture required; cannibalizing business models leading to cultural change; circular thinking in decision making of middle management necessary | 14 | |
Strategic fit/conviction * | Integrating sustainability and CE goals in corporate strategy; conviction of the CE | 12 | ||
Top-management commitment ** | Required due to major changes in business model, organization, and corporate culture | 10 | ||
Extent of change/complexity * | Often great changes needed, e.g., in organizational structure, accounting practices, bonus structures | 6 | ||
Implementation risks | Current/future legal situation | Partly in favor of a CE, e.g., Green Deal in EU; future legislation potentially threatening linear business models; partly hindering a CE, e.g., market restrictions for refurbished products in other countries or regulations for data security and liability | 9 | |
Technical feasibility | e.g., changed chemical formulation, reduced compatibility with previously used materials, problems with replication of former product features | 5 | ||
Sum | 276 |
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Eisenreich, A.; Füller, J.; Stuchtey, M. Circular Project Selection: How Companies Can Evaluate Circular Innovation Projects. Sustainability 2021, 13, 12407. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212407
Eisenreich A, Füller J, Stuchtey M. Circular Project Selection: How Companies Can Evaluate Circular Innovation Projects. Sustainability. 2021; 13(22):12407. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212407
Chicago/Turabian StyleEisenreich, Anja, Johann Füller, and Martin Stuchtey. 2021. "Circular Project Selection: How Companies Can Evaluate Circular Innovation Projects" Sustainability 13, no. 22: 12407. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212407
APA StyleEisenreich, A., Füller, J., & Stuchtey, M. (2021). Circular Project Selection: How Companies Can Evaluate Circular Innovation Projects. Sustainability, 13(22), 12407. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132212407