The Central Role of Engagement in Online Communities

Online communities are new social structures dependent on modern information technology, and they face equally modern challenges. Although satisfied members regularly consume content, it is considerably harder to coax them to contribute new content and help recruit others because they face unprecede...

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Veröffentlicht in:Information systems research 2014-09, Vol.25 (3), p.528-546
Hauptverfasser: Ray, Soumya, Kim, Sung S., Morris, James G.
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container_title Information systems research
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creator Ray, Soumya
Kim, Sung S.
Morris, James G.
description Online communities are new social structures dependent on modern information technology, and they face equally modern challenges. Although satisfied members regularly consume content, it is considerably harder to coax them to contribute new content and help recruit others because they face unprecedented social comparison and criticism. We propose that engagement—a concept only abstractly alluded to in information systems research—is the key to active participation in these unique sociotechnical environments. We constructed and tested a framework that demonstrates what engagement is, where it comes from, and how it powerfully explains both knowledge contribution and word of mouth. Our results show that members primarily contribute to and revisit an online community from a sense of engagement. Nonetheless, word of mouth is partly influenced by prior satisfaction. Therefore, engagement and satisfaction appear to be parallel mediating forces at work in online communities. Both mediators arise from a sense of communal identity and knowledge self-efficacy, but engagement also emerges from validation of self-identity. Nevertheless, we also found signs that the contributions of the most knowledgeable users are not purely from engagement, but also from a competing sense of self-efficacy. Our findings significantly contribute to the area of information systems by highlighting that engagement is a concrete phenomenon on its own, and it can be directly modeled and must be carefully managed.
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source INFORMS PubsOnLine; Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Analysis
Behavior
Citizen participation
Collaboration
community identification
Community identity
Customer satisfaction
engagement
Identity
Information storage and retrieval systems
Information systems
Internet
Knowledge
knowledge contribution
Knowledge management
knowledge self-efficacy
Online communities
Online identity
Online social networks
Prosocial behavior
Roles
Self concept
Self efficacy
self-identity verification
Services
Social interaction
Social networks
Studies
Virtual communities
Websites
word of mouth
Word of mouth advertising
title The Central Role of Engagement in Online Communities
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