Driving the Innovation Race: Effect of Competitiveness in Crowdsourcing Contest

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Dissanayake, Indika; Yasar, Mahmut; Vaghefi, Mahyar Sharif; Nerur, Sridhar P.
署名单位:
University of Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Amherst; University of Texas System; University of Texas Arlington; University of Texas System; University of Texas Arlington
刊物名称:
JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS
ISSN/ISSBN:
0742-1222
DOI:
10.1080/07421222.2024.2415766
发表日期:
2024
页码:
1142-1172
关键词:
All-pay auctions incentives idea PARTICIPATION tournaments performance allocation COMPENSATION generation QUALITY
摘要:
Given the imperative to innovate and stay ahead of their competition, organizations-called seekers-increasingly rely on the wisdom of the crowds to gain business insight. Motivated by monetary incentives, the desire to learn and the opportunity to enhance their reputation, solvers from the crowd participate in contests hosted by such seekers on crowdsourcing platforms. While the collective intelligence of the crowd is widely acknowledged to yield a diverse range of innovative solutions, the impact of the factors evoking contest competitiveness on the quality of these solutions remains unclear. Specifically, how competitiveness engendered by the interplay among the contest situational factors such as the nature of the contest's economic incentives, the number of solving teams involved, their proximities to the winning position (relative position), and the contest's complexity affects the solutions' quality is not well understood. To bridge this knowledge gap, our research examines the direct effects of the number of solving teams and prize inequality on performance and clarifies the moderating effect of task complexity. We also investigate how the direct effects change across the relative positions of the solving teams (e.g. high-performing versus low-performing teams). The study extends the boundaries of tournament literature by demonstrating how crowdsourcing contests evoke distinct behavioral responses compared to traditional tournaments. Practically, it provides novel insights for contest designers on crafting effective prize structures to optimize participant performance.