Opening Government : Designing Open Innovation Processes to Collaborate With External Problem Solvers

dc.contributor.authorMergel, Ines
dc.date.accessioned2016-09-12T12:37:11Z
dc.date.available2016-09-12T12:37:11Z
dc.date.issued2015-10-01eng
dc.description.abstractOpen government initiatives in the U.S. government focus on three main aspects: transparency, participation, and collaboration. Especially the collaboration mandate is relatively unexplored in the literature. In practice, government organizations recognize the need to include external problem solvers into their internal innovation creation processes. This is partly derived from a sense of urgency to improve the efficiency and quality of government service delivery. Another formal driver is the America Competes Act that instructs agencies to search for opportunities to meaningfully promote excellence in technology, education, and science. Government agencies are responding to these requirements by using open innovation (OI) approaches to invite citizens to crowdsource and peer produce solutions to public management problems. These distributed innovation processes occur at all levels of the U.S. government and it is important to understand what design elements are used to create innovative public management ideas. This article systematically reviews existing government crowdsourcing and peer production initiatives and shows that after agencies have defined their public management problem, they go through four different phases of the OI process: (1) idea generation through crowdsourcing, (2) incubation of submitted ideas with peer voting and collaborative improvements of favorite solutions, (3) validation with a proof of concept of implementation possibilities, and (4) reveal of the selected solution and the (internal) implementation of the winning idea. Participation and engagement are incentivized both with monetary and nonmonetary rewards, which lead to tangible solutions as well as intangible innovation outcomes, such as increased public awareness.eng
dc.description.versionpublishedeng
dc.identifier.doi10.1177/0894439314560851eng
dc.identifier.ppn477070299
dc.identifier.urihttps://kops.uni-konstanz.de/handle/123456789/35223
dc.language.isoengeng
dc.rightsterms-of-use
dc.rights.urihttps://rightsstatements.org/page/InC/1.0/
dc.subjectcrowdsourcing, open innovation, peer production, public sectoreng
dc.subject.ddc320eng
dc.titleOpening Government : Designing Open Innovation Processes to Collaborate With External Problem Solverseng
dc.typeJOURNAL_ARTICLEeng
dspace.entity.typePublication
kops.citation.bibtex
@article{Mergel2015-10-01Openi-35223,
  year={2015},
  doi={10.1177/0894439314560851},
  title={Opening Government : Designing Open Innovation Processes to Collaborate With External Problem Solvers},
  number={5},
  volume={33},
  issn={0894-4393},
  journal={Social Science Computer Review},
  pages={599--612},
  author={Mergel, Ines}
}
kops.citation.iso690MERGEL, Ines, 2015. Opening Government : Designing Open Innovation Processes to Collaborate With External Problem Solvers. In: Social Science Computer Review. 2015, 33(5), pp. 599-612. ISSN 0894-4393. eISSN 1552-8286. Available under: doi: 10.1177/0894439314560851deu
kops.citation.iso690MERGEL, Ines, 2015. Opening Government : Designing Open Innovation Processes to Collaborate With External Problem Solvers. In: Social Science Computer Review. 2015, 33(5), pp. 599-612. ISSN 0894-4393. eISSN 1552-8286. Available under: doi: 10.1177/0894439314560851eng
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