Friday, August 23, 2013

How are you a ‘prosumer’? In regards to Ritzer’s model of presumption, consider how you produce and consume your own identity.






Prosumption as a whole, has many elements to explain and also question. It is basically production and consumption intertwined and in todays day and age, it has a lot to do with user generated content online. The term” prosumer” is linked to Alvin Toffler (1980) who argued that prosumption was “the first wave” and predominant in pre-industrial societies. A ‘second wave’ of marketization then came next which separated these two functions, which allowed for producers and consumers today. (Ritzer, G & Jurgensen, N, 2010, p 17)





Another view of Toffler is that contemporary society is moving towards towards a ‘third wave’ that now and diversely signals their reintegration and merging  of ‘the rise of the prosumer’ (Toffler, 1980: 265).

Prosumers are also known as “co-creators” (Prahalad and Ramaswamy 2004) Tapscott and Williams (2006) have noted that prosumers are part of a new wave of acceleration where businesses put consumers to work. This new trend is rapidly moving around the world and we see this in everyday life through the following examples that I do on a weekly basis. Without even realising we are prosumers.


-          -Getting petrol yourself at the petrol station

-         - Getting money out at an ATM

-         - Self Service at Coles and Safeway

-       -   Kmart/Officeworks printing your own photos

-          -Purchasing movie tickets online

-          -Online shopping

(Ritzer, G & Jurgensen, N, 2010, p 19)


Image from The Australian Newspaper, December 23, 2010



I decided to talk to my Dad about being a prosumer because I believe his insight would be somewhat different than mine and it quite certainly was. My dad is someone who believes the self service is a lazy invention because people cannot be bothered working at check outs anymore. He also has an opinion that the self service has caused a job cut at Safeway and Coles because they don’t need any staff to physically help anyone do it.


These new epidemics or now known as “the norm” have also been further expressed online. What was once provided to us on Web 1.0 is now less used because of Web 2.0. I will further explain this.

Web 1.0 (eg: Yahoo and Google) is provider generated, however today Web 2.0 is used by prosumers. Web 2.0 has aided in the development of prosumers as it facilitates the implosion of production and consumption. (Ritzer, G & Jurgensen, N, 2010, p 20)



The following examples are things that I do every day and produce and consume my own identity.


-       -   Facebook, where users create profiles including photos, videos, texts and interact with others.

-        -  Instagram- posting photos to the public and allowing anyone to use and post my photo.

-        -  Ebay- where consumers create the market and I can buy or sell anything.

Creative Instagram Photos, Hypenotice, Jan 7, 2013.



Something that I take pride and joy in is my Instagram Page. I am constantly posting photos of my newest purchase, a Saturday night out, food or of course “selfies”. There are always friends of mine that join the Instagram epidemic daily, purely because they want to see other people’s photos. I not only follow my friends on instagram, but also celebrites and clothing/beauty brands. Therefore by using Instagram, I am producing my own content but I am also using their app and getting them more active users.


One thing about being a prosumer on instagram is that my “online identity” means as much to me as my personal identity. I frequently go through past photos on my instagram and always delete ones that I look back on and think are “embarrassing”. I currently now have 79 photos as opposed to my 304 photos. There were so many that I deleted because I didn’t have enough likes. Am I the only one who is insecure because I didn’t get enough likes? No. As I scroll through my feed, about 10 out of 50 photos that were posted 10 minutes ago have been deleted. What does this say about our society.




REFERENCES:

Ritzer, George and Jurgenson, Nathan 2010 ‘Production, Consumption, Prosumption: The nature of capitalism in the age of the digital ‘prosumer’, Journal of Consumer Culture, vol. 10 no. 1, pp 13-36.

4 comments:

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  2. Hello Elise,

    You gave a very thorough and detailed explanation on prosumption terminology and concepts which was excellent. I like that you included a perspective on prosumer-based technology from your dad, who belongs to a different generation to our tech-age one. While your dad considers it ‘lazy’, a friend (our age) considers self-checkouts as the best thing to happen in supermarkets because it’s more efficient and there’s less social interaction involved. While that sounds majorly anti-social, prosumption is in a sense quite anti-social: you do things on your own for the majority (for example, with online shopping there’s no need to face eager retail assistants and make small chit chat on while you wait for the transaction to go through). Certainly you can ‘interact’ with followers/friends/strangers on the internet, but it’s all virtual communication. Are we talking less or talking more via technology? Overall a very detailed and insightful post on prosumption, particularly your anecdote on Instagram.

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  3. Hey Elise,
    Your post was very detailed and great at explaining prosumer culture.
    Firstly, I really like the discussion with your Dad with the idea of self check outs at Supermarkets and Kmart being "lazy" from employees and cutting jobs. This made me think about prosumer culture in terms of getting money out from an ATM vs going to the bank teller, Pouring petrol yourself VS the store clerk, online shopping VS going to the shops.

    Secondly, I like the way you discussed Web 2.0 in relation to prosumer culture, especially with the Instagram example about deleting things that don't get enough likes. It's so true that the prosumer culture has been used to help construct out identity, I know I monitor my social media closely.
    Thanks Elise look forward to reading more

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  4. Hey Elise! You've used some great examples to show the relationship between producing and consuming a good or service. You made it very clear what the 'prosumer' is, and gave a good indication of the change of attitude towards prosumer culture- i.e. mixed feelnigs about using the self serve check outs. All in all a very to-the-point narrative. The use of images was effective.

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