Mapping the impact of social media for innovation: the role of social media in explaining innovation performance in the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study

Social media (SM) allow users to easily create, edit, or share content. The vast numbers of individuals that converge around sites like LinkedIn, Facebook, or Twitter embody a rich source of external knowledge that could be utilized for new product development (NPD). Complementing other channels for...

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Main Authors: Roberts, Deborah L., Piller, Frank, Lüttgens, Dirk
Format: Article
Published: Wiley 2016
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/41484/
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author Roberts, Deborah L.
Piller, Frank
Lüttgens, Dirk
author_facet Roberts, Deborah L.
Piller, Frank
Lüttgens, Dirk
author_sort Roberts, Deborah L.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Social media (SM) allow users to easily create, edit, or share content. The vast numbers of individuals that converge around sites like LinkedIn, Facebook, or Twitter embody a rich source of external knowledge that could be utilized for new product development (NPD). Complementing other channels for open innovation, SM can provide access to novel information about customer needs and technological solutions unknown to the firm. Anecdotal evidence suggests that there are considerable benefits from using SM during an innovation project, but empirical evidence is scare. Contributing to the perspective of openness in search, a number of hypotheses propose how SM as a new channel for open innovation can contribute to firm performance. This model is tested using data from the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study (CPAS), identifying factors influencing the relationship between SM and NPD performance. The findings indicate that utilizing information from SM channels can lead to higher performance, but that this link is influenced by the formalization of a firm's NPD process. This study also finds that the ability of a firm to benefit from external search in SM strongly depends upon complementary internal processes when organizing and conducting this activity. Furthermore, managers have to take care when utilizing information from SM channels in radical projects, as for this kind of projects only a weak significant performance contribution of SM could be found.
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spelling nottingham-414842020-05-04T18:20:44Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/41484/ Mapping the impact of social media for innovation: the role of social media in explaining innovation performance in the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study Roberts, Deborah L. Piller, Frank Lüttgens, Dirk Social media (SM) allow users to easily create, edit, or share content. The vast numbers of individuals that converge around sites like LinkedIn, Facebook, or Twitter embody a rich source of external knowledge that could be utilized for new product development (NPD). Complementing other channels for open innovation, SM can provide access to novel information about customer needs and technological solutions unknown to the firm. Anecdotal evidence suggests that there are considerable benefits from using SM during an innovation project, but empirical evidence is scare. Contributing to the perspective of openness in search, a number of hypotheses propose how SM as a new channel for open innovation can contribute to firm performance. This model is tested using data from the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study (CPAS), identifying factors influencing the relationship between SM and NPD performance. The findings indicate that utilizing information from SM channels can lead to higher performance, but that this link is influenced by the formalization of a firm's NPD process. This study also finds that the ability of a firm to benefit from external search in SM strongly depends upon complementary internal processes when organizing and conducting this activity. Furthermore, managers have to take care when utilizing information from SM channels in radical projects, as for this kind of projects only a weak significant performance contribution of SM could be found. Wiley 2016-11-17 Article PeerReviewed Roberts, Deborah L., Piller, Frank and Lüttgens, Dirk (2016) Mapping the impact of social media for innovation: the role of social media in explaining innovation performance in the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 33 (S1). pp. 117-135. ISSN 1540-5885 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jpim.12341/abstract doi:10.1111/jpim.12341 doi:10.1111/jpim.12341
spellingShingle Roberts, Deborah L.
Piller, Frank
Lüttgens, Dirk
Mapping the impact of social media for innovation: the role of social media in explaining innovation performance in the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study
title Mapping the impact of social media for innovation: the role of social media in explaining innovation performance in the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study
title_full Mapping the impact of social media for innovation: the role of social media in explaining innovation performance in the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study
title_fullStr Mapping the impact of social media for innovation: the role of social media in explaining innovation performance in the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study
title_full_unstemmed Mapping the impact of social media for innovation: the role of social media in explaining innovation performance in the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study
title_short Mapping the impact of social media for innovation: the role of social media in explaining innovation performance in the PDMA Comparative Performance Assessment Study
title_sort mapping the impact of social media for innovation: the role of social media in explaining innovation performance in the pdma comparative performance assessment study
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/41484/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/41484/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/41484/