Crowdsourcing New Product Ideas over Time: An Analysis of the Dell IdeaStorm Community
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Abstract
Several organizations have developed ongoing crowdsourcing communities that repeatedly collect ideas for new products and services from a large, dispersed “crowd” of nonexperts (consumers) over time. Despite its promises, little is known about the nature of an individual's ideation efforts in such an online community. Studying Dell's IdeaStorm community, serial ideators are found to be more likely than consumers with only one idea to generate an idea the organization finds valuable enough to implement, but they are unlikely to repeat their early success once their ideas are implemented. As ideators with past success attempt to again come up with ideas that will excite the organization, they instead end up…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 77.10
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 111
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Crowdsourcing
- Ideation
- Product (mathematics)
- Quality (philosophy)
- Entrepreneurship
- Sociology
- Computer science
- Marketing
- Decent work and economic growth