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The effects of asymmetric social ties, structural embeddedness, and tie strength on online content contribution behavior

Publication ,  Journal Article
Rishika, R; Ramaprasad, J
Published in: Management Science
July 1, 2019

For a social media community to thrive and grow, it is critical that users of the site interact with each other and contribute content to the site. We study the role of social ties in motivating user preference expression, a form of user content contribution, in an online social media community. We examine the role of three types of ties, reciprocated, follower, and followee ties, and assess whether the structural and relational properties of a user's social network moderate the social influence effect in user contribution. A unique disaggregate level panel data set of users' contributions and social tie formation activities from an online music platform is employed to study the impact of social ties. To address identification issues, we adopt a quasi-experimental approach based on dynamic propensity score matching. The results provide strong evidence of the influence of online network ties in online contribution behavior. We find that the influence of reciprocated ties is the greatest, followed by influence from followee ties and then follower ties. Additional analysis reveals that reciprocated and followee ties have even greater influence when they contribute new information for a focal user. Structural embeddedness and tie strength among network ties are found to amplify the effect of social contagion in online contribution. We conduct several sensitivity and robustness checks that lend credible support to our findings. The results add to the greater understanding of social influence in online contribution and provide valuable managerial insights into designs of online communities to enable greater user participation.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Management Science

DOI

EISSN

1526-5501

ISSN

0025-1909

Publication Date

July 1, 2019

Volume

65

Issue

7

Start / End Page

3398 / 3422

Related Subject Headings

  • Operations Research
  • 46 Information and computing sciences
  • 38 Economics
  • 35 Commerce, management, tourism and services
  • 15 Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services
  • 08 Information and Computing Sciences
 

Citation

APA
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MLA
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Rishika, R., & Ramaprasad, J. (2019). The effects of asymmetric social ties, structural embeddedness, and tie strength on online content contribution behavior. Management Science, 65(7), 3398–3422. https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2018.3087
Rishika, R., and J. Ramaprasad. “The effects of asymmetric social ties, structural embeddedness, and tie strength on online content contribution behavior.” Management Science 65, no. 7 (July 1, 2019): 3398–3422. https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2018.3087.
Rishika, R., and J. Ramaprasad. “The effects of asymmetric social ties, structural embeddedness, and tie strength on online content contribution behavior.” Management Science, vol. 65, no. 7, July 2019, pp. 3398–422. Scopus, doi:10.1287/mnsc.2018.3087.

Published In

Management Science

DOI

EISSN

1526-5501

ISSN

0025-1909

Publication Date

July 1, 2019

Volume

65

Issue

7

Start / End Page

3398 / 3422

Related Subject Headings

  • Operations Research
  • 46 Information and computing sciences
  • 38 Economics
  • 35 Commerce, management, tourism and services
  • 15 Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services
  • 08 Information and Computing Sciences