Competition and Collaboration in Crowdsourcing Communities: What happens when peers evaluate each other? (2404.14141v1)
Abstract: Crowdsourcing has evolved as an organizational approach to distributed problem solving and innovation. As contests are embedded in online communities and evaluation rights are assigned to the crowd, community members face a tension: they find themselves exposed to both competitive motives to win the contest prize and collaborative participation motives in the community. The competitive motive suggests they may evaluate rivals strategically according to their self-interest, the collaborative motive suggests they may evaluate their peers truthfully according to mutual interest. Using field data from Threadless on 38 million peer evaluations of more than 150,000 submissions across 75,000 individuals over 10 years and two natural experiments to rule out alternative explanations, we answer the question of how community members resolve this tension. We show that as their skill level increases, they become increasingly competitive and shift from using self-promotion to sabotaging their closest competitors. However, we also find signs of collaborative behavior when high-skilled members show leniency toward those community members who do not directly threaten their chance of winning. We explain how the individual-level use of strategic evaluations translates into important organizational-level outcomes by affecting the community structure through individuals' long-term participation. While low-skill targets of sabotage are less likely to participate in future contests, high-skill targets are more likely. This suggests a feedback loop between competitive evaluation behavior and future participation. These findings have important implications for the literature on crowdsourcing design, and the evolution and sustainability of crowdsourcing communities.
- Friends, gifts, and cliques: social proximity and recognition in peer-based tournament rituals. Academy of Management Journal, 62(3):883–917.
- Preferences for truth-telling. Econometrica, 87(4):1115–1153.
- Combining creativity and control: Understanding individual motivation in large-scale collaborative creativity. Accounting, Organizations and Society, 36(2):63–85.
- Reflections on the 2022 amr decade award: crowdsourcing as a solution to distant search. Academy of Management Review, 48(4):597–610.
- Angrist, J. D. (2001). Estimation of Limited Dependent Variable Models With Dummy Endogenous Regressors. Journal of Business & Economic Statistics, 19(1):2–28.
- Archak, N. (2010). Money, glory and cheap talk: analyzing strategic behavior of contestants in simultaneous crowdsourcing contests on TopCoder.com. In Proceedings of the 19th International Conference on World Wide Web, pages 21–30.
- Optimal design of crowdsourcing contests. In Proceedings of International Conference on Information Systems, page 200. Association for Information Systems.
- Which hat to wear. In Social Identity Processes in Organizational Contexts, pages 31–48. Psychology Press, New York, NY.
- Sabotage in Tournaments: Evidence from a Natural Experiment. Kyklos, 65(4):425–441.
- Incentives, competition, and inequality in markets for creative production. Research Policy, 50(4):104212.
- Intellectual Property Norms in Online Communities : How User-Organized Intellectual Property Regulation Supports Innovation. Information Systems Research, 27(4):724–750.
- Motivation and sorting of human capital in open innovation. Strategic Management Journal, 36(6):795–820.
- Self-Confidence and Personal Motivation. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 117(3):871–915.
- Berg, J. M. (2016). Balancing on the creative highwire: Forecasting the success of novel ideas in organizations. Administrative Science Quarterly, 61(3):433–468.
- A meta-analytic review of moral licensing. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 41(4):540–558.
- Rate or trade? identifying winning ideas in open idea sourcing. Information Systems Research, 27(1):27–48.
- Heterogeneous Submission Behavior and its Implications for Success in Innovation Contests with Public Submissions. Production and Operations Management, 25(7):1157–1176.
- Network analysis in the social sciences. Science, 323(5916):892–895.
- “Open” disclosure of innovations, incentives and follow-on reuse: Theory on processes of cumulative innovation and a field experiment in computational biology. Research Policy, 44(1):4–19.
- Performance responses to competition across skill levels in rank-order tournaments: field evidence and implications for tournament design. RAND Journal of Economics, 47(1):140–165.
- Brabham, D. C. (2010). Moving the crowd at threadless. Information, Communication & Society, 13(8):1122–1145.
- Community-based innovation contests: Where competition meets cooperation. Creativity and Innovation Management, 19(3):290–303.
- Overconfidence and Excess Entry: An Experimental Approach. American Economic Review, 89(1):306–318.
- Tournaments and office politics: Evidence from a real effort experiment. American Economic Review, 100(1):504–17.
- Robust systems of cooperation in the presence of rankings: how displaying prosocial contributions can offset the disruptive effects of performance rankings. Organization Science, 31(2):287–307.
- The Dark Side of Competition for Status. Management Science, 60(1):38–55.
- Chen, K.-P. (2003). Sabotage in promotion tournaments. Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, 19(1):119–140.
- Conan: A framework for detecting and handling collusion in crowdsourcing. Information Sciences, 515(April):44–63.
- Understanding online community citizenship behaviors through social support and social identity. International Journal of Information Management, 35(4):504–519.
- Self-interest: Defining and understanding a human motive. Journal of Organizational Behavior: The International Journal of Industrial, Occupational and Organizational Psychology and Behavior, 26(8):985–991.
- Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1990). Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience. Harper & Row, New York, NY.
- How organizations manage crowds: Define, broadcast, attract, and select. In Sydow, J. and Berends, H., editors, Managing Inter-organizational Collaborations: Process Views (Research in the Sociology of Organizations, Vol. 64), pages 239–270. Emerald, Leeds, UK.
- Progressing to the center: Coordinating project work. Organization Science, 22(4):961–979.
- One foot in, one foot out: how does individuals’ external search breadth affect innovation outcomes? Strategic Management Journal, 37(2):280–302.
- Gender differences in competition and sabotage. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 100(April):64–80.
- The influence of status on evaluations: Evidence from online coding contests. MIS Quarterly, 46(4):2085–2110.
- Deutsch, M. (1949). A theory of co-operation and competition. Human Relations, 2(2):129–152.
- Sabotage in Tournaments with Heterogeneous Contestants: Empirical Evidence from the Soccer Pitch. Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 115(4):1138–1157.
- Dixit, A. (1987). Strategic Behavior in Contests. American Economic Review, 77(5):891– 898.
- Incentives for Helping on the Job: Theory and Evidence. Journal of Labor Economics, 16(1):1–25.
- Social comparisons and deception across workplace hierarchies: Field and experimental evidence. Organization Science, 26(1):78–98.
- Elster, J. (1989). Social norms and economic theory. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 3(4):99–117.
- White lies. Management Science, 58(4):723–733.
- Knowledge collaboration in online communities. Organization Science, 22(5):1224–1239.
- Network exchange patterns in online communities. Organization Science, 22(6):1464–1480.
- Fair play: Perceived fairness in crowdsourcing competitions and the customer relationship-related consequences. Management Decision, 55(9):1924–1941.
- Firms, crowds, and innovation. Strategic Organization, 15(2):119–140.
- Fiske, A. P. (1992). The four elementary forms of sociality: framework for a unified theory of social relations. Psychological Review, 99(4):689–723.
- The architecture of collaboration. Strategic Management Journal, 33(6):734–750.
- Avoiding the bullies: The resilience of cooperation among unequals. PLoS Computational Biology, 17(4):e1008847.
- “Does This Sound Like a Fair Deal?”: Antecedents and Consequences of Fairness Expectations in the Individual’s Decision to Participate in Firm Innovation. Organization Science, 24(5):1495–1516.
- The “I Designed It Myself” Effect in Mass Customization. Management Science, 56(1):125–140.
- How communities support innovative activities: an exploration of assistance and sharing among end-users. Research Policy, 32(1):157–178.
- Why do people like competition? the motivation for winning, putting forth effort, improving one’s performance, performing well, being instrumental, and expressing forceful/aggressive behavior. Personality and Individual Differences, 19(2):175–184.
- Spite is contagious in dynamic networks. Nature Communications, 12(1):1–9.
- Relational incentives theory. Psychological Review, 129(3):586–602.
- Favoritism under social pressure. Review of Economics and Statistics, 87(2):208–216.
- Gaure, S. (2013). lfe: Linear group fixed effects. The R Journal, 5(2):104–116.
- The dark and the bright side of co-creation: Triggers of member behavior in online innovation communities. Journal of Business Research, 66(9):1516–1527.
- Lying aversion and the size of the lie. American Economic Review, 108(2):419–453.
- Determinants of faculty pay: An agency theory perspective. Academy of Management Journal, 35(5):921–955.
- When rivalry backfires: How individual skill and risk of status loss moderate the effects of rivalry on performance. Working Paper.
- Greene, W. W. H. . (2012). Econometric analysis. Pearson, New York, NY, 6th edition.
- To share or not to share? Professional norms, reference groups, and information withholding among life scientists. Organization Science, 21(4):873–891.
- Sabotage in tournaments: Evidence from a laboratory experiment. Management Science, 57(4):611–627.
- Sabotage in corporate contests–an experimental analysis. International Journal of the Economics of Business, 14(3):367–392.
- Profiting from voluntary information spillovers: how users benefit by freely revealing their innovations. Research Policy, 32(10):1753–1769.
- Open source software and the “private-collective” innovation model: Issues for organization science. Organization Science, 14(2):209–223.
- Should you really produce what consumers like online? empirical evidence for reciprocal voting in open innovation contests. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 35(2):209–229.
- Successive open innovation contests and incentives: winner-take-all or multiple prizes? Journal of Product Innovation Management, 35(4):492–517.
- Crowdsourcing new product ideas under consumer learning. Management Science, 60(9):2138–2159.
- Communitition: The tension between competition and collaboration in community-based design contests. Creativity and Innovation Management, 20(1):3–21.
- Framing norms in online communities. Information & Management, 56(1):15–27.
- Marginality and problem-solving effectiveness in broadcast search. Organization Science, 21(5):1016–1033.
- The influence of hierarchy on idea generation and selection in the innovation process. Organization Science, 28(4):653–669.
- The psychology of rivalry: A relationally dependent analysis of competition. Academy of Management Journal, 53(5):943–969.
- Whatever it takes to win: Rivalry increases unethical behavior. Academy of Management Journal, 59(5):1508–1534.
- External bridging and internal bonding: Unlocking the generative resources of member time and attention spent in online communities. MIS Quarterly, 42(1):265–283.
- Peer evaluations: Evaluating and being evaluated. Organization Science, (in press).
- Editorial: A model is a model. Strategy Science, 4(1):1–3.
- Konrad, K. (2000). Sabotage in rent-seeking contests. Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, 16(1):155–165.
- Konrad, K. A. (2009). Strategy and Dynamics in Contests. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK.
- Exploring the social ledger: negative relationships and negative asymmetry in social networks in organizations. Academy of Management Review, 31(3):596–614.
- Competition, cooperation, and the search for economic rents: A syncretic model. Academy of Management Review, 22(1):110–141.
- Threadless: The Business of Community. Harvard Business School Multimedia/Video Case.
- Why hackers do what they do: Understanding motivation and effort in free/open source software projects. Technical Report September 2003, Open Source Software Projects.
- Lazear, E. P. (1989). Pay Equality and Industrial Politics. Journal of Political Economy, 97(3):561.
- Rank-order tournaments as optimum labor contracts. Journal of Political Economy, 89(5):841–864.
- Gender differences in how scientists present the importance of their research: observational study. BMJ, 367.
- Lewis, M. W. (2000). Exploring paradox: Toward a more comprehensive guide. Academy of Management Review, 25(4):760–776.
- Li, D. (2017). Expertise versus bias in evaluation: Evidence from the NIH. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 9(2):60–92.
- Fairness from the top: Perceived procedural justice and collaborative problem solving in new product development. Organization Science, 18(2):200–216.
- Crowdsourcing with all-pay auctions: A field experiment on taskcn. Management Science, 60(8):2020–2037.
- Social hierarchy: The self-reinforcing nature of power and status. Academy of Management Annals, 2(1):351–398.
- Towards an information systems perspective and research agenda on crowdsourcing for innovation. Journal of Strategic Information Systems, 22(4):257–268.
- Effect of knowledge-sharing trajectories on innovative outcomes in temporary online crowds. Information Systems Research, 27(4):685–703.
- Moral self-licensing: When being good frees us to be bad. Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 4(5):344–357.
- An Economic Approach to Influence Activities in Organizations. American Journal of Sociology, 94:154–179.
- Moffitt, R. (2001). Policy interventions, low-level equilibria, and social interactions. In Durlauf, S. and Young, P., editors, Social Dynamics. MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.
- Münster, J. (2007). Selection tournaments, sabotage, and participation. Journal of Economics and Management Strategy, 16(4):943–970.
- Different roles, different strokes: Organizing virtual customer environments to promote two types of customer contributions. Organization Science, 21(2):554–572.
- Nickell, J. (2010). Threadless: Ten Years of T-shirts from the World’s Most Inspiring Online Design Community. Abrams Image, New York, NY.
- Perry-Smith, J. E. (2006). Social yet creative: The role of social relationships in facilitating individual creativity. Academy of Management Journal, 49(1):85–101.
- Idea rejected, tie formed: Organizations’ feedback on crowdsourced ideas. Academy of Management Journal, 62(2):503–530.
- Membership turnover and collaboration success in online communities: Explaining rises and falls from grace in wikipedia. MIS Quarterly, 35,(3):613–627.
- Biases in the selection stage of bottom-up strategy formulation. Strategic Management Journal, 34(7):782–799.
- Building member attachment in online communities: Applying theories of group identity and interpersonal bonds. MIS Quarterly, 36(3):841–864.
- Taste for competition and the gender gap among young business professionals. Technical Report 21695, National Bureau of Economic Research.
- Enhancing crowdsourcing contest outcomes: Choice and market context in incentive design. Journal of Management Information Systems, (in press).
- Learning from mixed signals in online innovation communities. Organization Science, 29(6):1010–1032.
- Understanding the motivations, participation, and performance of open source software developers: A longitudinal study of the apache projects. Management Science, 52(7):984–999.
- Self-determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and well-being. American Psychologist, 55(1):68.
- Who contributes Knowledge? Core-periphery tension in online innovation communities. Organization Science, 32(3):752–775.
- Participation motives, moral disengagement, and unethical behaviour in idea competitions. International Journal of Innovation Management, 22(06):1850043.
- Asymmetric tournaments, equal opportunity laws, and affirmative action: Some experimental results. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 107(2):511–539.
- Building status in an online community. Organization Science, 33(6):2519–2540.
- Smith, A. (1759 (2010)). The theory of moral sentiments. Penguin, London, UK.
- Networks, creativity, and time: Staying creative through brokerage and network rejuvenation. Academy of Management Journal, 64(4):1164–1190.
- Modeling Survival Data: Extending the Cox Model. Springer, New York, NY.
- When interpersonal competition helps and when it harms: An integration via challenge and threat. Academy of Management Annals, 14(2):908–934.
- Tsai, W. (2002). Social structure of “coopetition” within a multiunit organization: Coordination, competition, and intraorganizational knowledge sharing. Organization Science, 13(2):179–190.
- Tullock, G. (1980). Efficient rent seeking. In Buchanan, J., Tollison, R., and Tullock, G., editors, Toward a theory of the rent-seeking society. Texas A&M University Press, College Station, TX.
- The role of paradox theory in decision making and management research. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 155(November):1–6.
- “it is what one does”: Why people participate and help others in electronic communities of practice. Journal of Strategic Information Systems, 9(2-3):155–173.
- Why should i share? examining social capital and knowledge contribution in electronic networks of practice. MIS Quarterly, 29(1):35–57.
- Social network analysis: Methods and applications. Cambridge University Press, New York, NY.
- Governing crowdsourcing for unconstrained innovation problems. Strategic Management Journal, in press.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.