1st Edition

Online Communities and Open Innovation Governance and Symbolic Value Creation

128 Pages
by Routledge

128 Pages
by Routledge

128 Pages
by Routledge

The advent of Internet marked a significant change in how users and customers can be involved in the innovative process. History is rife with examples of how users innovate, but Internet and its associated communication technologies brought radically new means for individuals to interact rapidly and at little cost in communities that spur new innovations. These communities are initiated and... Read more

1. Online Communities and Open Innovation: Governance and Symbolic Value Creation Linus Dahlander, Lars Frederiksen and Francesco Rullani

2. Of Hackers and Hairdressers: Modularity and the Organizational Economics of Open-source Collaboration Richard N. Langlois and Giampaolo Garzarelli

3. The Role of Participation Architecture in Growing Sponsored Open Source Communities Joel West and Siobha´n O’Mahony

4. Keep it Simple: A Companion for Simple Wikipedia? Matthijs den Besten and Jean-Michel Dalle

5. Communities of Consumption and Made in Italy Eleonora Di Maria and Vladi Finotto

6. Leveraging Lead User Knowledge in Software Development—The Case of Weblog Technology Stephan Kaiser and Gordon Mu¨ ller-Seitz

7. Getting Clear About Communities in Open Innovation Joel West and Karim R. Lakhani

Biography

Linus Dahlander is an Assistant Professor at European School of Management and Technology, Berlin, Germany. His research investigates how new ideas and innovations are developed in networks and communities. The research seeks to understand how these communities and networks unfold over time when individuals are distributed and autonomous – self-selecting tasks and collaboration partners.

Lars Frederiksen works at the Innovation Management Group at Department of Marketing and Statistics, at Aarhus School of Business and Social Sciences, Denmark. His research explores the ideas, activities and roles of individuals and teams in innovative projects, communities and organizations. He studies the development of knowledge creation, integration and transfer through social networks. Lars employs both qualitative and quantitative methodologies.

Francesco Rullani is Assistant Professor in Entrepreneurship and Management of Innovation at LUISS Guido Carli, Department of Economics and Business, Rome, Italy. His research focuses on production of knowledge by self-organizing groups of actors. He has explored these themes in the field of free/open source software, employing mainly quantitative techniques applied to large databases.