2011
DOI: 10.1002/asi.21624
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Emphasizing social features in information portals: Effects on new member engagement

Abstract: Many information portals are adding social features with hopes of enhancing the overall user experience. Invitations to join and welcome pages that highlight these social features are expected to encourage use and participation. While this approach is widespread and seems plausible, the effect of providing and highlighting social features remains to be tested. We studied the effects of emphasizing social features on users' response to invitations, their decisions to join, their willingness to provide profile i… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…Taken together, our results have important implications for understanding changes in community technologies. Community leaders who face community development challenges tend to pursue the implementation of "new" or "missing" features in hopes of improving the value and experience they provide for individual participant (Sharma et al 2011). While our goal was not to provide a detailed examination of such features, analysis of the OCASA model suggests that when altering a community platform it is also critical to consider how changes might affect emergent community characteristics such as size and resilience.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Taken together, our results have important implications for understanding changes in community technologies. Community leaders who face community development challenges tend to pursue the implementation of "new" or "missing" features in hopes of improving the value and experience they provide for individual participant (Sharma et al 2011). While our goal was not to provide a detailed examination of such features, analysis of the OCASA model suggests that when altering a community platform it is also critical to consider how changes might affect emergent community characteristics such as size and resilience.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These ten journals can be considered as the core publication channels for scientific research in the field of communication in the context of organisations. In scientometrics, the field that studies the development of the sciences, journal articles commonly provide a "proxy" for the longitudinal development of research fields (Milojević, Sugimoto, Yan, & Ding, 2011). Books are less suitable for a longitudinal analysis mainly because they are published less frequently than journal articles.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Title words are used for the analysis of the cognitive structure of the sciences (Callon, Courtial, Turner, & Bauin, 1983). Article title words are suitable for the analysis because they are highly codified within the research fields, and provide a reliable view of the longitudinal development of science (Leydesdorff, 1989;Milojević et al, 2011). We use co-occurring title words to identify topics associated with the most prominent theories.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[12] also showed the success of personalized invitations, stressing the social aspect of a forum. However, this success was not observed in [28]; on the contrary, social aspects in invitations led to fewer registrations with less filled profiles. In [37], interaction was rather observed as a metric of a successful community.…”
Section: Common Bondmentioning
confidence: 93%