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Transformation of Work Through Internal Crowdsourcing
Type
fundamental research project
Start Date
01 November 2018
End Date
31 September 2020
Status
completed
Keywords
Crowdsourcing
platform-based work organization
process theory
crowd work
Description
Digitization fundamentally changes markets and organizations. In order to cope with a fast-moving and uncertain environment, organizations are looking for ways to become more flexible and productive. One approach to achieve these goals is the concept of internal crowdsourcing, in which organizations reorchestrate their employees via digital platforms using open calls for temporary task assignments. In order to capture its advantages companies must transform their “traditional” mode of working that is usually build on principles such as hierarchy and clearly defined job roles, whereas the new work paradigm of internal crowdsourcing is more flexible and autonomous. The concept has a strong record of accomplishment in the digital economy on platforms such as Uber or Upwork and is now being increasingly applied within the boundaries of organizations. More and more organizations intend to move stable traditional jobs into a pool of flexible “crowd workers.” For example, Dieter Zetsche – the CEO of Daimler AG – announced to transfer 20% of Daimler’s personnel into an internal crowd for a range of innovation tasks. However, building up and orchestrating such a huge crowd reflects a major transformation for any organization that does not hap-pen automatically.
In order to address this transition, the intended project seeks to develop a process theory that explains the transformation process when organizations strive towards such approaches of platform-based work organization. In so doing, we will overcome the limitations of existing research that considers internal crowdsourcing only as static socio-technical system. We ex-tend this view by reconceptualizing internal crowdsourcing as technochange process that deals with the introduction of an IT-enabled organization innovation for orchestrating and executing work processes via digital platforms. In order to reach this goal, we follow a multi-phase mixed-method approach. Based on a large account of already collected data in three case organizations, we intend to collect additional qualitative and quantitative data regarding the investigated transformation processes in a longitudinal fashion and to integrate these alternating and complimentary insights into a process theory.
Our project will make two important contributions. First, we will contribute a process theory that describes how organizations can manage the transformation from traditional work set-tings to platform-based internal crowdsourcing. Second, we will enrich the process theory by including the perspective of affected employees in order to explain the perception and acceptance of internal crowdsourcing by employees. In so doing, we address the shortcomings of existing research that predominantly describes internal crowdsourcing as a static system by reconceptualizing internal crowdsourcing as organizational innovation that enacts a technochange process and developing a process theory for platform-based work transformation in organizations. These contributions will be relevant for various academic fields such as management and information systems research. We intend to create a two conference publications and one high-caliber journal submission (FT50; e.g., Information Systems Research) as well as a practitioner’s digest. For practice, this project’s results will help companies success-fully manage the transformation process from traditional work settings towards platform-based modes of work organization such as internal crowdsourcing. For education, the projects contributes to the University of St.Gallen’s efforts to teach students competencies for a digitized world.
In order to address this transition, the intended project seeks to develop a process theory that explains the transformation process when organizations strive towards such approaches of platform-based work organization. In so doing, we will overcome the limitations of existing research that considers internal crowdsourcing only as static socio-technical system. We ex-tend this view by reconceptualizing internal crowdsourcing as technochange process that deals with the introduction of an IT-enabled organization innovation for orchestrating and executing work processes via digital platforms. In order to reach this goal, we follow a multi-phase mixed-method approach. Based on a large account of already collected data in three case organizations, we intend to collect additional qualitative and quantitative data regarding the investigated transformation processes in a longitudinal fashion and to integrate these alternating and complimentary insights into a process theory.
Our project will make two important contributions. First, we will contribute a process theory that describes how organizations can manage the transformation from traditional work set-tings to platform-based internal crowdsourcing. Second, we will enrich the process theory by including the perspective of affected employees in order to explain the perception and acceptance of internal crowdsourcing by employees. In so doing, we address the shortcomings of existing research that predominantly describes internal crowdsourcing as a static system by reconceptualizing internal crowdsourcing as organizational innovation that enacts a technochange process and developing a process theory for platform-based work transformation in organizations. These contributions will be relevant for various academic fields such as management and information systems research. We intend to create a two conference publications and one high-caliber journal submission (FT50; e.g., Information Systems Research) as well as a practitioner’s digest. For practice, this project’s results will help companies success-fully manage the transformation process from traditional work settings towards platform-based modes of work organization such as internal crowdsourcing. For education, the projects contributes to the University of St.Gallen’s efforts to teach students competencies for a digitized world.
Leader contributor(s)
Member contributor(s)
Funder(s)
Range
Institute/School
Range (De)
Institut/School
Division(s)
Eprints ID
247657
8 results
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1 - 8 of 8
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Publication
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PublicationLeveraging the Internal Work Force through Crowdtesting – Crowdsourcing in BankingType: conference paper
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PublicationUnderstanding Job Satisfaction of Crowd Workers: An Empirical Analysis of Its Determinants and Effects( 2018)
;Durward, DavidCrowd work has emerged as new pattern of digitally mediated collaboration. In this paper, we focus on the determinants and effects of crowd workers’ job satisfaction – a perspective that has been largely neglected by current crowdsourcing research. We report results from a survey of 161 crowd workers participating in crowdsourced software testing. Our research shows that job satisfaction mediates the effects of monetary rewards, hedonic value, and cognitive stimulation on the intention to participate in future testing tasks. By contrast, factors of work context (i.e., flexibility and provided information) have no effects. We contribute to the literature by unraveling job satisfaction as causal mechanism influencing future participation. For practice, our results help to design more effective tasks in crowd work.Type: conference paperJournal: Multikonferenz Wirtschaftsinformatik (MKWI) -
PublicationTransforming Work Organization with Internal Crowds: a Process TheoryType: conference paperJournal: ICIS 2020 Proceedings
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PublicationAdaptation Barriers in Internal Crowdsourcing: A Multiple Case StudyRecently, the application of internal crowdsourcing in companies as a new form of orchestrating work has increased substantially. Early research has shown that organizations should apply internal crowdsourcing due to its benefits, such as fast access to internal knowledge and increased productivi-ty. Although studies have identified some advantages, internal crowdsourcing is a complex initiative and we do not sufficiently know how to rollout internal crowdsourcing initiatives in a company and to guide them to a state of stable operations in the adaptation stage. Some papers derived barriers for internal crowdsourcing and solutions on how to overcome them. However, these barriers address mostly the operational stage, when the initiative is already stable. Some papers address adaptation barriers, but the assessment frameworks in current literature used to detect them were incomprehen-sive resulting in only few adaptation barriers and solutions. Therefore, we identify the adaptation bar-riers of internal crowdsourcing comprehensively through the technochange theory in a multiple case study, assess what solutions the companies applied and describe how the solutions work in order to display how to overcome barriers in a consolidated introduction model for internal crowdsourcing.Type: conference poster
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PublicationInternes Crowdsourcing – Herausforderungen und Lösungsstrategien für eine erfolgreiche Transformation der ArbeitsorganisationType: journal articleJournal: HMD : Praxis der WirtschaftsinformatikVolume: 56Issue: 4
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PublicationA Process Theory on Transformation of Work Through Internal CrowdsourcingType: conference paperJournal: Academy of Management Annual Meeting ProceedingsVolume: Vol. 2020
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PublicationThe Nature of Crowd Work and its Effects on Individuals’ Work PerceptionCrowd work reflects a new form of gainful employment on the Internet. We study how the nature of the tasks being performed and financial compensation jointly shape work perceptions of crowdworkers in order to better understand the changing modes and patterns of digital work. Surveying individuals on 23 German crowd working platforms, this work is the first to add a multi-platform perspective on perceived working conditions in crowd work. We show that crowd workers need rather high levels of financial compensation before task characteristics become relevant for shaping favorable perceptions of working conditions. We explain these results by considering financial compensation as an informational cue indicating the appreciation of working effort that is internalized by well-paid crowd workers. Resulting boundary conditions for task design are discussed. These results help us understand when and under what conditions crowd work can be regarded as a fulfilling type of employment in highly developed countries.Type: journal articleJournal: Journal of Management Information Systems (JMIS)Volume: 37Issue: 1
Scopus© Citations 30