明星从何而来?创意环境中明星与非明星合作者的角色

Where Do Stars Come From? The Role of Star vs. Nonstar Collaborators in Creative Settings

ORGANIZATION SCIENCE · 2018
被引 61
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究创新者与明星或非明星合作对其创造力的不同影响,发现与非明星合作提供多元信息,而与明星合作可学习其创意整合技能,且社会网络凝聚力和专业相似性对明星合作有正向作用。

Abstract

Creative stars make disproportionately influential contributions to their fields. Yet we know little about how an innovator’s creative performance is affected by collaborating with stars. This paper studies the creative aspects of interpersonal collaboration from a distinct perspective: the quality of the collaborator. Both star and nonstar collaborators provide different benefits to a focal innovator. The innovator benefits from collaborating with nonstars because they may provide access to diverse information improving the outcome of the creative task at hand. In contrast, the focal innovator benefits from collaborating with stars because the focal innovator can also experience and learn from the star’s superior set of creative synthesis skills (which integrate diverse, sometimes contradictory ideas into new coherent and holistic solutions) and, thus, build lasting creative capabilities. Building on theoretical arguments about those two different collaboration purposes, we first examine how a star collaboration (versus a nonstar collaboration) affects a comprehensive measure of an innovator’s creativity: the likelihood of emerging as a star. Second, we examine how the different creative benefits of engaging with a star versus a nonstar collaborator affect the effect of two widely studied aspects of interpersonal collaboration on star emergence: social network cohesion and expertise similarity. In contrast to collaborations with nonstars, for which social cohesion and expertise similarity limit access to diverse information, negatively affecting star emergence, social network cohesion and expertise similarity have a decidedly positive effect on star collaborations by improving the transfer of the star’s set of creative skills. Our empirical setting consists of designers who have been granted design patents in the United States from 1975 through 2010.

创新创造力社会网络知识管理创业