Designing smallholder-centric product and service bundles to incentivise technology adoption using an affordance perspective

Smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa face complex and interrelated constraints that hinder the adoption of sustainable agricultural practices. Studies have shown that product and service bundles could serve as a solution to overcome multiple barriers smallholders face simultaneously, if designe...

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Main Author: Hoffman, Elena
Format: Tesis
Language:Inglés
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179664
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author Hoffman, Elena
author_browse Hoffman, Elena
author_facet Hoffman, Elena
author_sort Hoffman, Elena
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa face complex and interrelated constraints that hinder the adoption of sustainable agricultural practices. Studies have shown that product and service bundles could serve as a solution to overcome multiple barriers smallholders face simultaneously, if designed appropriately. This study aims to design product and service bundles to incentivise the adoption of Mbili Mbili, a maize-legume intercropping practice, in Kasungu, Malawi. Using a smallholder-centric design approach grounded in design thinking and affordance theory, the research followed a three- step qualitative methodology process: identifying driver and barriers to adoption, mapping existing products and services, and co-developing and refining bundle prototypes with farmers. In doing so, this study extends the bundling literature by applying it to the adoption of agricultural practices rather than individual artefacts. Design thinking provided a structured, participatory framework for bundle development, while affordance theory served both as an analytical lens and a design tool, ensuring that bundle components aligned with farmers’ resources, constraints, and everyday realities. The findings reveal that smallholders face a range of key constraints, most notably the impacts of climate change, limited access to inputs, labour shortages, and restricted market access which are also highly interrelated and shaped by the local context. Although a variety of products and services are available, they remain fragmented, poorly coordinated, and in some cases entirely absent, leaving critical gaps. Bundling offers a strategic approach to reconfigure these components into coherent packages that reduce risk, improve accessibility, and increase the perceived feasibility of adopting Mbili Mbili. Farmers consistently valued bundles that included farm inputs, training, and finance mechanisms as essential, with livestock and market access serving as strong enhancers when aligned with their needs. Overall, the research demonstrates that thoughtfully designed bundles can positively influence farmer perceptions, reduce adoption barriers, and contribute to more inclusive and sustainable agricultural transitions.
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spelling CGSpace1796642026-01-13T02:06:52Z Designing smallholder-centric product and service bundles to incentivise technology adoption using an affordance perspective Hoffman, Elena smallholders design technology adoption affordability Smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa face complex and interrelated constraints that hinder the adoption of sustainable agricultural practices. Studies have shown that product and service bundles could serve as a solution to overcome multiple barriers smallholders face simultaneously, if designed appropriately. This study aims to design product and service bundles to incentivise the adoption of Mbili Mbili, a maize-legume intercropping practice, in Kasungu, Malawi. Using a smallholder-centric design approach grounded in design thinking and affordance theory, the research followed a three- step qualitative methodology process: identifying driver and barriers to adoption, mapping existing products and services, and co-developing and refining bundle prototypes with farmers. In doing so, this study extends the bundling literature by applying it to the adoption of agricultural practices rather than individual artefacts. Design thinking provided a structured, participatory framework for bundle development, while affordance theory served both as an analytical lens and a design tool, ensuring that bundle components aligned with farmers’ resources, constraints, and everyday realities. The findings reveal that smallholders face a range of key constraints, most notably the impacts of climate change, limited access to inputs, labour shortages, and restricted market access which are also highly interrelated and shaped by the local context. Although a variety of products and services are available, they remain fragmented, poorly coordinated, and in some cases entirely absent, leaving critical gaps. Bundling offers a strategic approach to reconfigure these components into coherent packages that reduce risk, improve accessibility, and increase the perceived feasibility of adopting Mbili Mbili. Farmers consistently valued bundles that included farm inputs, training, and finance mechanisms as essential, with livestock and market access serving as strong enhancers when aligned with their needs. Overall, the research demonstrates that thoughtfully designed bundles can positively influence farmer perceptions, reduce adoption barriers, and contribute to more inclusive and sustainable agricultural transitions. 2025-07 2026-01-12T09:06:50Z 2026-01-12T09:06:50Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179664 en Open Access application/pdf Hoffman, E. (2025) Designing smallholder-centric product and service bundles to incentivise technology adoption using an affordance perspective. [Thesis] 66 p.
spellingShingle smallholders
design
technology adoption
affordability
Hoffman, Elena
Designing smallholder-centric product and service bundles to incentivise technology adoption using an affordance perspective
title Designing smallholder-centric product and service bundles to incentivise technology adoption using an affordance perspective
title_full Designing smallholder-centric product and service bundles to incentivise technology adoption using an affordance perspective
title_fullStr Designing smallholder-centric product and service bundles to incentivise technology adoption using an affordance perspective
title_full_unstemmed Designing smallholder-centric product and service bundles to incentivise technology adoption using an affordance perspective
title_short Designing smallholder-centric product and service bundles to incentivise technology adoption using an affordance perspective
title_sort designing smallholder centric product and service bundles to incentivise technology adoption using an affordance perspective
topic smallholders
design
technology adoption
affordability
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179664
work_keys_str_mv AT hoffmanelena designingsmallholdercentricproductandservicebundlestoincentivisetechnologyadoptionusinganaffordanceperspective