A problem in the making: How firms formulate sharable problems for open innovation contests M Wallin, G von Krogh, JH Sieg Creating and Capturing Value Through Crowdsourcing
Book chapter, 2018

Crowdsourcing in the form of innovation contests stimulates knowledge creation external to the firm by distributing technical, innovation-related problems to external solvers and by proposing a fixed monetary reward for solutions. While prior work demonstrates that innovation contests can generate solutions of value to the firm, little is known about how problems are formulated for such contests. We investigate problem formulation in a multiple exploratory case study of seven firms and inductively develop a theoretical framework that explains the mechanisms of formulating sharable problems for innovation contests. The chapter contributes to the literatures on crowdsourcing and open innovation by providing a rare account of the intra-organizational implications of engaging in innovation contests and by providing initial clues to problem formulation—a critical antecedent to firms’ ability to leverage external sources of innovation.

open innovation

problem formulation

crowdsourcing

Innovation contest

external problem solving

Author

Martin Wallin

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Entrepreneurship and Strategy

Georg von Krogh

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zürich (ETH)

Jan Henrik Sieg

Creating and Capturing Value Through Crowdsourcing

Subject Categories

Business Administration

Information Systemes, Social aspects

DOI

10.1093/oso/9780198816225.001.0001

More information

Latest update

3/25/2022