Abstract
In today´s world of rapid technological changes and high-velocity markets, one of the central challenges many organizations face is to create truly novel products and services that can secure sustainable competitive advantage. While most organizations are quite capable of improving their products and services, they often lack the ability to break from their own treaded pathways. In this article, we elaborate on the collective side of lead users. We argue that intra-firm communities of practice as social entities can display similar lead user characteristics although no single individual member possess all criteria commonly associated with lead-userness. We ground our arguments predominantly in conceptual deliberations based on the conjunction of the concepts of lead users and communities of practice. However, as we have studied these communities of practice in the German Federal Armed Forces (an end-user-organization in the public sector), we are providing first evidence from different case studies supporting our concept of collective lead users.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Angur, M. G., & Nataraajan, R. (1998). A Causal Exploration of Innovatorship and Lead-usership: a Research Note. Omega, 26(3), 437–442.
Bechky, B. A. (2003). Sharing Meaning Across Occupational Communities: The Transformation of Understanding on a Production Floor. Organization Science. (14(3)), 312–330.
Belz, F.-M., & Baumbach, W. (2010). Netnography as a Method of Lead User Identification. Creativity and Innovation Management, 19(3), 304–313.
Bertels, H. M. J., Kleinschmidt, E. J., & Koen, P. A. (2011). Communities of Practice versus Organizational Climate: Which One Matters More to Dispersed Collaboration in the Front End of Innovation? Journal of Product Innovation Management. (28), 757–772.
Bridwell-Mitchell, E. N. (2016). Collaborative Institutional Agency: How Peer Learning in CoP Enables and Inhibits Micro-Institutional Chnage. Organization Studies, 37(2), 161-192.
Brown, J. S., & Duguid, P. (1991). Organizational Learning and Communities of Practice: Toward a Unified View of Working, Learning, and innovation. Organization Science, 2(1), 40–57.
Brown, J. S., & Duguid, P. (2001). Knowledge and Organization: A Social-Practice Perspective. Organization Science, 12(2), 198–213.
Contu, A., & Willmott, H. (2003). Re-Embedding Situatedness: The Importance of Power Relations in Learning Theory. Organization Science, 14(3), 283–296.
Faullant, R., Schwarz, E. J., Krajger, I., & Breitenecker, R. J. (2012). Towards a Comprehensive Understanding of Lead-userness: The Search for Individual Creativity. Creativity and Innovation Management, 21(1), 76–92.
Franke, N., & Shah, S. K. (2003). How communities support innovative activities: an exploration of assistance and sharing among end-users. Research Policy, 32(1), 157–178.
Franke, N., von Hippel, E., & Schreier, M. (2006). Finding Commercially Attractive User Innovations: A Test of Lead-User Theory. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 23(4), 301–315.
Füller, J., Matzler, K., & Hoppe, M. (2008). Brand Community Members as a Source of Innovation. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 25(6), 608–619.
Harhoff, D., Henkel, J., & von Hippel, E. (2003). Profiting from voluntary information spillovers: How users benefit by freely revealing their innovations. Research Policy, 32(10), 1753–1769.
Harvey, J.-F., Cohendent, P., Simon, L., & Borzillo, S. (2015). Knowing Communities in the Front End of Innovation. Research Technology Management, 58(1), 46–54.
Herstatt, C., & von Hippel, E. (1992). From Experience: Developing New Product Concepts Via the Lead User Method: A Case Study in a “Low-Tech” Field. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 9(3), 213–221.
Hienerth, C. (2006). The commercialization of user innovations: the development of the rodeo kayak industry. R&D Management, 36(3), 273–294.
Hienerth, C., & Lettl, C. (2011). Exploring How Peer Communities Enable Lead User Innovations to Become Standard Equipment in the Industry: Community Pull Effects. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 28(1), 175–195.
Hienerth, C., & Lettl, C. (2017). Perspective: Understanding the Nature and Measurement of the Lead User Construct. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 34(1), 3–12.
Hienerth, C., Lettl, C., & Keinz, P. (2014). Synergies among Producer Firms, Lead Users, and User Communities: The Case of the LEGO Producer-User Ecosystem. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 31(4), 848–866.
Hienerth, C., von Hippel, E., & Jensen, M. B. (2014). User community vs. producer innovation development efficiency: A first empirical study. Research Policy, 43(1), 190–201.
Jagasia, J., Baul, U., & Mallik, D. (2015). A Framework for Communities of Practice in Learning Organizations. Business Perspectives and Research, 3(1), 1–20.
Jeppesen, L. B., & Frederiksen, L. (2006). Why Do Users Contribute to Firm Hosted User communities? The Case of Computer-Controlled Music Instruments. Organization Science, 17(1), 45–63.
Jeppesen, L. B., & Laursen, K. (2009). The role of lead users in knowledge sharing. Research Policy, 38(10), 1582–1589.
Kimble, C., & Hildreth, P. (2005). Dualities, distributed communities of practice and knowledge management. Journal of Knowledge Management, 9(4), 102–113.
Kirkman, B. L., Cordery, J. L., Mathieu, J., Rosen, B., & Kukenberger, M. (2013). Global organizational communities of practice: The effects of nationality diversity, psychological safety, and media richness on community performance. Human Relations, 66(3), 333–362.
Kirkman, B. L., Mathieu, J. E., Cordery, J. L., Rosen, B., & Kukenberger, M. (2011). Managing a new collaborative entity in business organizations: understanding organizational communities of practice effectiveness. The Journal of Applied Psychology, 96(6), 1234–1245.
Kodama, M. (2000). Business innovation through strategic community management—a case study of NTT’s digital network revolution. Strategic Chanege, 9(3), 177–196.
Kogut, B., & Zander, U. (1996). What Firms Do? Coordination, Identity, and Learning. Organization Science, 7(5), 502–518.
Kratzer, J., & Lettl, C. (2008). A Social Network Perspective of Lead Users and Creativity: An Empirical Study among Children. Creativity and Innovation Management, 17(1), 26–36.
Kratzer, J., & Lettl, C. (2009). Distinctive Roles of Lead Users and Opinion Leaders in the Social Networks of Schoolchildren. Journal of Consumer Research, 36(4), 646–659.
Kratzer, J., Lettl, C., Franke, N., & Gloor, P. A. (2016). The Social Network Position of Lead Users. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 33(2), 201–216.
Lakhani, K. R., & von Hippel, E. (2003). How open source software works: “free” user-to-user assistance. Research Policy, 32(6), 923–943.
Lave, J., & Wenger, E. (1991). Situated Learning: Legitimate Peripheral Participation. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Lettl, C., Herstatt, C., & Gemuenden, H. G. (2006). Users’ contributions to radical innovation: evidence from four cases in the field of medical equipment technology. R&D Management, 36(3), 251–272.
Lilien, G. L., Morrison, P. D., Searls, K., Sonnack, M., & Hippel, E. von. (2002). Performance Assessment of the Lead User Idea-Generation Process for New Product Development. Management Science, 48(8), 1042–1059.
Lindkvist, L. (2005). Knowledge Communities and Knowledge Collectivities: A Typology of Knowledge Work in Groups. Journal of Management Studies, 42(6), 1189–1210.
Lüthje, C., & Herstatt, C. (2004). The Lead User method: an outline of empirical findings and issues for future research. R&D Management, 34(4), 553–568.
Mahr, D., & Lievens, A. (2012). Virtual lead user communities: Drivers of knowledge creation for innovation. Research Policy, 41(1), 167–177.
Mahr, D., Lievens, A., & Blazevic, V. (2014). The Value of Customer Cocreated Knowledge during the Innovation Process. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 31(3), 599–615.
Morrison, P. D., Roberts, J. H., & Hippel, E. von. (2000). Determinants of User Innovation and Innovation Sharing in a Local Market. Management Science, 46(12), 1513–1527.
Morrison, P. D., Roberts, J. H., & Midgley, D. F. (2004). The nature of lead users and measurement of leading edge status. Research Policy, 33(2), 351–362.
Pastoors, K. (2007). Consultants: love‐hate relationships with communities of practice. The Learning Organization, 14(1), 21–33.
Pattinson, S., & Preece, D. (2014). Communities of practice, knowledge acquisition and innovation: A case study of science-based SMEs. Journal of Knowledge Management, 18(1), 107–120.
Probst, G., & Borzillo, S. (2008). Why communities of practice succeed and why they fail. European Management Journal, 26(5), 335–347.
Schreier, M., & Prügl, R. (2008). Extending Lead-User Theory: Antecedents and Consequences of Consumers’ Lead-userness. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 25(4), 331–346.
Schweisfurth, T. G., & Herstatt, C. (2015). Embedded (Lead) Users as Catalysts to Product Diffusion. Creativity and Innovation Management, 24(1), 151–168.
Schweisfurth, T. G., & Herstatt, C. (2016). How internal users contribute to corporate product innovation: the case of embedded users. R&D Management, 46(S1), 107–126.
Schweisfurth, T. G., & Raasch, C. (2015). Embedded lead users—The benefits of employing users for corporate innovation. Research Policy, 44(1), 168–180.
Shah, S. K. (2006). Motivation Governance and the Viability of Hybrid Forms in Open Source Software Development. Management Science, 52(7), 1000–1014.
Shah, S. K., & Tripsas, M. (2007). The Accidental Entrepreneur: The Emergent and Collective Process of User Entrepreneurship. Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, 1(1-2), 123–140.
Sole, D., & Edmondson, A. C. (2002). Situated Knowldege and Learning in Dispersed Teams. British Journal of Management, 13(S2), 17–34.
Swan, J., Scarbrough, H., & Robertson, M. (2002). The Construction of ‘Communities of Practice’ in the Management of Innovation. Management Learning, 33(4), 477–496.
Tietz, R., Füller, J., & Herstatt, C. (2006). Signaling - An Innovative Approach to Identify Lead Users in Online Communities. In T. Blecker, G. Friedrich, L. Hvam, & K. Edwards (Eds.), Customer Interaction and Customer Integration (Vol. 2, pp. 453–468). Berlin: GITO Verlag.
Topousis, D. E., Dennehy, C. J., & Lebsock, K. L. (2012). Nasa’s Experiences Enabling the Capture and Sharing of Technical Expertise Through Communities of Practice. Acta Astronautica, 81(2), 499–511.
Urban, G. L., & von Hippel, E. (1988). Lead User Analyses for the Development of New Industrial Products. Management Science, 34(5), 569–582.
Von Hippel, E. (1986). Lead Users: A Source of Novel Product Concepts. Management Science, 32(7), 791–805.
Von Hippel, E. (2001). Innovation by User Communities: Learning from Open-Source Software. MIT Sloan Management Review, 42(4), 82–86.
Von Hippel, E. (2005). Democratizing Innovation. Cambridge, MAS: MIT Press.
Von Hippel, E. (2007). Horizontal innovation networks - by and for users. Industrial and Corporate Change, 16(2), 293–315.
Von Hippel, E., & Krogh, G. von. (2003). Open Source Software and the “Private-Collective” Innovation Model: Issues for Organization Science. Organization Science, 14(2), 209–223.
Wenger, E. C., McDermott, R. A., & Snyder, W. M. (2002). Cultivating Communities of Practice: A Guide to Managing Knowledge. Cambridge, MAS: Harvard Business Press.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2020 Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH, part of Springer Nature
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Koller, H., Schulte, B., Andresen, F., Kreuzmann, A. (2020). Communities of practice as collective lead users. In: Tiwari, R., Buse, S. (eds) Managing Innovation in a Global and Digital World. Springer Gabler, Wiesbaden. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-27241-8_10
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-27241-8_10
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer Gabler, Wiesbaden
Print ISBN: 978-3-658-27240-1
Online ISBN: 978-3-658-27241-8
eBook Packages: Business and ManagementBusiness and Management (R0)