Chat More and Contribute Better: An Empirical Study of a Knowledge-Sharing Community

ZEW Discussion Paper No. 21-061 // 2021
ZEW Discussion Paper No. 21-061 // 2021

Chat More and Contribute Better: An Empirical Study of a Knowledge-Sharing Community

We analyze whether an informal second channel for communication can improve the efficiency of knowledge transfer in an electronic network of practice. We explore this question by analyzing the effect of chat rooms in the well-known Q&A forum Stack Overflow. We identify the causal effect using a difference-in-differences approach, which exploits a feed functionality that non-selectively pushed all questions from the Q&A into the relevant chat rooms. We report two main findings: First, chat rooms reduced the time until a question in the main Q&A received a satisfactory answer. Second, chat rooms disproportionately benefited new users who asked low-quality questions. Our study has clear managerial implications: A second channel for communication can complement the main channel in online communities to enhance both efficiency and inclusion.

Chen, Xiaomeng, Chris Forman and Michael Kummer (2021), Chat More and Contribute Better: An Empirical Study of a Knowledge-Sharing Community, ZEW Discussion Paper No. 21-061, Mannheim.

Authors Xiaomeng Chen // Chris Forman // Michael Kummer