Sharing Economy

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Sharing Economy af Mind Map: Sharing Economy

1. Peer Economy

1.1. Person-to-Person marketplaces that facilitate the sharing and direct trade of products and services built on peer trust

1.1.1. Examples

1.1.1.1. Airbnb

1.1.1.2. Lyft

1.1.1.3. Getaround

1.1.1.4. Kitchensurfing

1.1.1.5. ETsy

1.1.1.6. uberX

2. Sharing Economy

2.1. An Economic module based on sharing underutilized assets from spaces to skills to stuff for monetary or non-monetary benefits. it is largely focus on P2P marketplaces.

2.1.1. Examples

2.1.1.1. Airbnb

2.1.1.2. Getaround

2.1.1.3. Lyft

2.1.1.4. Couchsurfing

3. Examples

3.1. Lyft

3.2. Airbnb

3.3. ZipCar

4. Collaborative Economy

4.1. An Economy Built on distributed connected individuals and communities as opposed to centralized institutions, transforming how we can produce, consume, finance and learn.

4.1.1. Production

4.1.1.1. Design, production and distribution of goods through collaborative networks

4.1.1.1.1. Examples

4.1.2. Consumption

4.1.2.1. Maximum utilization of assets through efficient modules of redistribution and shared access.

4.1.3. Finance

4.1.3.1. Person-to-person banking and crowd-driven investment models that decentralize finance.

4.1.3.1.1. Examples

4.1.4. Education

4.1.4.1. Open education and person-to-person teaching models that democratize education.

4.1.4.1.1. Examples

5. Collaborative Consumption

5.1. An Economy module based on sharing, sawpping, trading and renting products and services enabling access of ownership. it is reinventing not just not just What we consume but Who we consume

5.1.1. Collaborative Lifestyles

5.1.1.1. Non-Product assets such as space, skills and money are exchanged in a new ways

5.1.1.1.1. Examples

5.1.2. Redistribution Markets

5.1.2.1. Unwanted or underused goods redistribution

5.1.2.1.1. Examples

5.1.3. Product Service systems

5.1.3.1. pay to access the benefit of a product versus needing to own it outright

5.1.3.1.1. Examples

5.2. There are three distinct transaction that can be applied

5.2.1. Business-to-Customer (B2C)

5.2.1.1. Business owns inventory and facilities transactions among users

5.2.1.1.1. Examples

5.2.2. Peer-to-Peer (P2P)

5.2.2.1. Assets are owned and exchanged directly person-to-person

5.2.2.1.1. Examples

5.2.3. Business-to-Business (B2B Or Enterprise)

5.2.3.1. Solutions that enable business to unlock monitise idling capacity of their existing assets

5.2.3.1.1. Examples