Author List: Singh, Param Vir; Tan, Yong; Mookerjee, Vijay S.;
MIS Quarterly, 2011, Volume 35, Issue 4, Page 813-A7.
What determines the success of open source projects? In this study, we investigate the impact of network social capital on open source project success. We define network social capital as the benefits open source developers secure from their membership in developer collaboration networks. We focus on one specific type of success as measured by the rate of knowledge creation in an open source project. Specific hypotheses are developed and tested using a longitudinal panel of 2,378 projects hosted at SourceForge. We find that network social capital is not equally accessible to or appropriated by all projects. Our main results are as follows. First, projects with greater internal cohesion (that is, cohesion among the project members) are more successful. Second, external cohesion (that is, cohesion among the external contacts of a project) has an inverse U-shaped relationship with the project’s success; moderate levels of external cohesion are best for a project’s success rather than very low or very high levels. Third, the technological diversity of the external network of a project also has the greatest benefit when it is neither too low nor too high. Fourth, the number of direct and indirect external contacts positively affects a project’s success such that the effect of the number of direct contacts is moderated by the number of indirect contacts. These results are robust to several control variables and alternate model specifications. Several theoretical and managerial implications are provided.
Keywords: Social networks; open source software development; cohesion; project success; team composition
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#58 0.183 internal external audit auditing results sources closure auditors study control bridging appears integrity manager effectiveness auditor controls facilitating boundaries potential
#173 0.160 effect impact affect results positive effects direct findings influence important positively model data suggest test factors negative affects significant relationship
#273 0.149 source open software oss development developers projects developer proprietary community success openness impact paper project associated activity phenomenon peripheral variety
#135 0.147 project projects development management isd results process team developed managers teams software stakeholders successful complex develop contingencies problems greater planning
#74 0.106 high low level levels increase associated related characterized terms study focus weak hand choose general lower best predicted conditions implications
#286 0.077 success model failure information impact variables failures delone suggested dimensions mclean reasons variable finally categories years recommendations benefits studies identify
#249 0.058 network networks social analysis ties structure p2p exchange externalities individual impact peer-to-peer structural growth centrality participants sharing economic ownership embeddedness
#158 0.056 capital social ict communication rural icts cognitive society information well-being relational india societal empirically create develop disadvantaged technologies explore china