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Index
Cover page
Halftitle page
Title page
Copyright page
Foreword to Creating and capturing value through crowdsourcing
Acknowledgments
Contents
List of Figures and Tables
Figures
Tables
List of Contributors
1. Introduction to Creating and Capturing Value Through Crowdsourcing
Introduction
Conclusions and Future Research Directions
Part I. Crowdsourcing: Fundamentals and the Role of Crowds and Communities
2. Crowdsourcing: A Primer and Research Framework
Introduction
A Conceptual Framework for Identifying and Exploring Theoretically Interesting Crowdsourcing Questions
Conclusions and Future Research
3. Three’s a Crowd?
Introduction
Online Distributed Innovation: A Crowd is not a Group
Crowd as a Solution to Distant Search: When is the Right Time?
Ideas Come Next: The Rise of Crowd-Driven Entrepreneurship
Key Questions for the Crowd-Oriented Organization
Conclusions and Future Research
4. How Firms Leverage Crowds and Communities for Open Innovation
Introduction
Communities, Crowds, and Collaboration
Motivating Network Collaborators
Degrees of Collaborative Innovativeness
Discussion, Conclusions, and Future Research
Conclusion
5. The Road to Crowdfunding Success: A Review of the Extant Literature
Introduction
Crowdfunding: Its Features and Definitions
Achieving Crowdfunding Success
The Role of Crowdfunders
Conclusions and Future Research
Part II. Tournament-Based Crowdsourcing
6. A Problem in the Making: How Firms Formulate Sharable Problems for Open Innovation Contests
Introduction
Literature Review
Research Design
Findings
Discussion, Conclusions, and Future Research
Conclusion
7. The Role of Information Patterns in Designing Crowdsourcing Contests
Introduction
Previous Work
Contributions and Main Results
Crowdsourcing Contests as All-Pay Auctions
The Model
A Taxonomy of Tasks
Crowdsourcing Versus Assignment
Conclusions and Future Research
Part III. Collaboration-Based Crowdsourcing
8. Renegotiating Public Value with Co-Production
Introduction
Value Creation in the Public Sector
Bureaucracy and Value Creation
Bureaucracy and Public Value
Co-Production: New Modes of Value
Co-Production and in the Public Sector: A New Value Generating Proposition
How Can Public Administration Benefit from Co-Production and Crowdsourcing to Better Produce Public Value?
Conclusions and Future Research
9. Tapping into Diversity Through Open Innovation Platforms: The Emergence of Boundary-Spanning Practices
Introduction
Background Literature
Methods and Research Settings
Findings
Discussion
Conclusions and Future Research
10. Co-Creation from a Telecommunication Provider’s Perspective: A Comparative Study on Innovation with Customers and Employees
Introduction
Towards Open Innovation
Innovation with Crowds
Case Study
Results
Discussion
Conclusions and Future Research
Part IV. Hybrids: Tournament-Based and Collaboration-Based Crowdsourcing
11. Co-opetition in Crowdsourcing: When Simultaneous Cooperation and Competition Deliver Superior Solutions
Introduction
Background Literature: Co-opetition and Why Crowdsourcing
Framework for Exploring the Impact of Co-opetition on Crowdsourcing Performance
Conclusions and Future Research
12. Prediction Markets For Crowdsourcing
Introduction
Crowdsourcing for Knowledge in Innovation Management
Prediction Markets and Crowdsourcing
Empirical Analysis: Case and Methodology
Conclusions and Future Research
13. Ethics in Crowdsourcing: Revisiting and Revising the Role of Stakeholder Theory
Introduction
Core Concepts of Stakeholder Theory
The Applicability of Stakeholder Theory for Crowdsourcing
Challenges: Stakeholder Theory and Crowdsourcing
Conclusions and Future Research
Index
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