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Journal ArticleDOI

Content or community? a digital business strategy for content providers in the social age

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TLDR
In this article, the authors show that willingness to pay for premium services is strongly associated with the level of community participation of the user and the volume of content consumption on Last.fm, a site offering both music consumption and online community features.
Abstract
The content industry has been undergoing a tremendous transformation in the last two decades. We focus in this paper on recent changes in the form of social computing. Although the content industry has implemented social computing to a large extent, it has done so from a techno-centric approach in which social features are viewed as complementary rather than integral to content. This approach does not capitalize on users' social behavior in the website and does not answer the content industry's need to elicit payment from consumers. We suggest that both of these objectives can be achieved by acknowledging the fusion between content and community, making the social experience central to the content website's digital business strategy. We use data from Last.fm, a site offering both music consumption and online community features. The basic use of Last.fm is free, and premium services are provided for a fixed monthly subscription fee. Although the premium services on Last.fm are aimed primarily at improving the content consumption experience, we find that willingness to pay for premium services is strongly associated with the level of community participation of the user. Drawing from the literature on levels of participation in online communities, we show that consumers' willingness to pay increases as they climb the so-called "ladder of participation" on the website. Moreover, we find that willingness to pay is more strongly linked to community participation than to the volume of content consumption. We control for self-selection bias by using propensity score matching. We extend our results by estimating a hazard model to study the effect of community activity on the time between joining the website and the subscription decision. Our results suggest that firms whose digital business models remain viable in a world of "freemium" will be those that take a strategic rather than techno-centric view of social media, that integrate social media into the consumption and purchase experience rather than use it merely as a substitute for offline soft marketing. We provide new evidence of the importance of fusing social computing with content delivery and, in the process, lay a foundation for a broader strategic path for the digital content industry in an age of growing user participation.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Digital Paywall Design: Implications for Content Demand and Subscriptions

TL;DR: A large-scale study of the implications of digital paywall design for publishers using microlevel user activity data from the New York Times to conduct an economically significant impact of the newspaper’s pay wall design on content demand, subscriptions, and net revenue.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Digital Business: A Scientific Publication Positioning using Scientometric Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a convergence axis classification consisting of digital business publication to characterize the body of knowledge generated from four decades of publication: Information technology, Management, Business ecosystem, Industry, Benchmarking, E-commerce, Digitalization, Strategy, abbreviated as IMBIBEDS themes.
Journal ArticleDOI

It was Fun, but Did it Last?: The Dynamic Interplay between Fun Motives and Contributors' Activity in Peer Production

TL;DR: The interplay between contributors' fun motives and activity over time is examined, finding that persistence in editing is related to fun, while the amount of editing is not: individuals who persist in editing are characterized by higher fun motives early on (when compared to dropouts), though their motives are not related to the number of edits made.
Journal ArticleDOI

Democratizing Journalism – How User‐Generated Content and User Communities Affect Publishers’ Business Models

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the relationship between users' expectations of sources of content and their willingness to provide their own content and found that both user-generated content and professional journalists' content is of value to users.
Journal ArticleDOI

A critical narrative approach to openness: The impact of open development on structural transformation

TL;DR: A new critical narrative approach to understanding openness explicitly focused on structural transformation and power is contributed, proposing hermeneutic composability and contesting normative narratives of openness as analytical techniques for an integrated, mutually constitutive conception of interactions between individuals, open artefacts, and open social praxis.
References
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Book

Situated Learning: Legitimate Peripheral Participation

TL;DR: This work has shown that legitimate peripheral participation in communities of practice is not confined to midwives, tailors, quartermasters, butchers, non-drinking alcoholics and the like.
Book

Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity

TL;DR: Identity in practice, modes of belonging, participation and non-participation, and learning communities: a guide to understanding identity in practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

The central role of the propensity score in observational studies for causal effects

Paul R. Rosenbaum, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1983 - 
TL;DR: The authors discusses the central role of propensity scores and balancing scores in the analysis of observational studies and shows that adjustment for the scalar propensity score is sufficient to remove bias due to all observed covariates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consumer Perceptions of Price, Quality, and Value: A Means-End Model and Synthesis of Evidence:

TL;DR: In this paper, evidence from past research and insights from an exploratory investigation are combined in a conceptual model that defines and relates price, perceived quality, and perceived value for a product.
Journal ArticleDOI

On a Test of Whether one of Two Random Variables is Stochastically Larger than the Other

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the limit distribution is normal if n, n$ go to infinity in any arbitrary manner, where n = m = 8 and n = n = 8.
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