Master Thesis at the Chair of Strategic Management and Innovation Topics Focused on Online
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Master Thesis at the Chair of Strategic Management and Innovation [Topics focused on online communities and/or open innovation]
The following thesis topics require experience or strong motivation to learn the latest quantitative and/or qualitative research methods. Programming skill is a benefit. Research requires either statistical analysis of archival data or online survey/questionnaire/interviews etc.
Some motivating questions:
1. What is the role of online communities (e.g. the open software communities) in enabling and structuring new forms of collaboration and innovation? (c.f. Faraj et al. (2011) Knowledge Collaboration in Online Communities. Organization Science, 22(5): 1224-1239.) 2. How do technological advancement facilitate novel ways of organizing crowds and innovation? (Von Krogh and Von Hippel (2006) The promise of research on open source software. Management Science 52.7 975-983.) 3. What forms of institutional entrepreneurship have been facilitated in the digital age? (Garud et al. (2002) Institutional entrepreneurship in the sponsorship of common technological standards: The case of Sun Microsystems and Java. Academy of management journal, 45(1), 196-214.) 4. What are the implications of various online communities for firms value creation and appropriation? 5. How do leaders emerge in online communities? (c.f. Faraj et al. (2015) Leading collaboration in online communities. MIS Quarterly 39.2) 6. What is the role of open innovation in changing the boundaries of the firm? What are the implications of changed boundaries? (c.f. Lakhani et al. (2012). Open innovation and organizational boundaries: the impact of task decomposition and knowledge distribution on the locus of innovation. Harvard Business School Technology & Operations Mgt. Unit Working Paper, (12-57), 12-057.) 7. Are there new organizational forms that arise as firms engage in different forms of innovation and organization? (Puranam et al. (2014) What's “new” about new forms of organizing? Academy of Management Review 39.2 (2014): 162-180.) 8. What is the role of organizational boundaries in new forms of organizing? (Hwang et al. (2015) Knowledge Sharing in Online Communities: Learning to Cross Geographic and Hierarchical Boundaries. Organization Science ) 9. How do insights from organization theory inform our understanding of open, participatory forms of innovation? (von Krogh, & Haefliger (2010). Opening up design science: The challenge of designing for reuse and joint development. The Journal of Strategic Information Systems, 19(4), 232-241.) 10. What are the respective benefits and costs of engaging different crowds and organizational forms when innovating? 11. How to govern online communities? (c.f., O'Mahony and Ferraro. (2007) The emergence of governance in an open source community." Academy of Management Journal 50.5: 1079- 1106.) 12. How do institutions enable or constrain more open forms of organization and innovation? (Wallin & von Krogh (2010). Organizing for Open Innovation: Focus on the Integration of Knowledge. Organizational Dynamics, 39(2), 145-154.)
Some example research contexts and data sources: 1. CrunchBase: CrunchBase provides a database of the startup ecosystem consisting of investors, incubators and start-ups, which comprises around 500,000 data points profiling companies, people, funds, funding and events. The company claims to have more than 50,000 active contributors. Within this dataset of over 4,300 firms, 3,800 financial organizations, and 11,300 funding rounds (almost) complete network covering several years can be constructed. [Complete data available at http://data.crunchbase.com] References: a. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11187-011-9337-4 b. http://chbrown.github.io/kdd-2013-usb/workshops/MLG/doc/liang-mlg13.pdf c. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jsc.893/full
2. Stack Exchange is a network of question and answer Websites on topics of varied fields, each site covering a specific topic, where questions, answers, and users are subject to a reputation award process. The sites are modeled after Stack Overflow, a Q&A site for computing programming questions that was the original site in this network. The reputation system allows the sites to be self-moderating. [Complete data available at https://archive.org/details/stackexchange]
References: a. http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2141550 b. http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2480557 c. http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2487107 d. http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=6676932
3. Github Data dump
GitHub is a Web-based Git repository hosting service. It offers all of the distributed revision control and source code management (SCM) functionality of Git as well as adding its own features. Unlike Git, which is strictly a command-line tool, GitHub provides a Web-based graphical interface and desktop as well as mobile integration. As of 2015, GitHub reports having over 11 million users and over 29.4 million repositories, making it the largest host of source code in the world. [Complete data available at https://www.githubarchive.org]
References: a. http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2145396 b. http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2441792 c. http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=6498480&tag=1
4. Hacker News Hacker News is a social news website focusing on computer science and entrepreneurship. It is run by Paul Graham’s investment fund and startup incubator, Y Combinator. In general, content that can be submitted is defined as “anything that gratifies one’s intellectual curiosity”. Data dump: https://github.com/sytelus/HackerNewsData
References: a. http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2441866 5. Yelp Yelp is an American multinational corporation headquartered in San Francisco, California. It develops, hosts and markets Yelp.com and the Yelp mobile app, which publish crowd-sourced reviews about local businesss. The company also trains small businesses in how to respond to reviews, hosts social events for reviewers, and provides data about businesses, including health inspection scores. Data set: https://www.yelp.com/dataset_challenge
References: a. http://erhanerdogan.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1695/files/2011/10/12-016.pdf b. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/Papers.cfm?abstract_id=2293164 c. http://www2.cs.uh.edu/~arjun/papers/ICWSM-Spam_final_camera-submit.pdf
6. Amazon Reviews Amazon.com, Inc., often referred to as simply Amazon, is an American electronic commerce and cloud computing company with headquarters in Seattle, Washington. It is the largest Internet-based retailer in the United States.
Data set: https://snap.stanford.edu/data/web-Amazon.html
References: a. http://www.jstor.org/stable/20721420?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
6. Bitcoin Bitcoin is a form of digital currency, created and held electronically. No one controls it. Bitcoins aren’t printed, like dollars or euros – they’re produced by people, and increasingly businesses, running computers all around the world, using software that solves mathematical problems.
It’s the first example of a growing category of money known as cryptocurrency.
Data set: http://compbio.cs.uic.edu/data/bitcoin/
7. Open Education All data from Stanford's courses on Coursera and NovoEd is available. For Coursera format details see this page. For an explanation of data available from Stanford courses offered on our OpenEdX platform, see Datastage.
8. AirBNB Airbnb is a website for people to list, find, and rent lodging. It has over 1,500,000 listings in 34,000 cities and 190 countries
Dataset: http://insideairbnb.com/get-the-data.html
9. Uber Uber Technologies Inc. is an American multinational online transportation network company headquartered in San Francisco, California.
Dataset: https://github.com/fivethirtyeight/uber-tlc-foil-response
10. IDEO, Innocentive, Wikipedia, or any online community: data can be crawled either using API requests or writing spiders (for example using scrapy: http://scrapy.org )