Skip navigation
Title: 

Social Ties and User Generated Content: Evidence from an Online Social Network

Authors: Hofstetter, Reto - University of Bern
Shriver, Scott K. - Stanford GSB
Nair, Harikesh S. - Stanford GSB
Miller, Klaus - University of Bern
Issue Date: 2009
Series/Report no.: Net Institute Working Paper;09-28
Abstract: We use variation in wind speeds at surfing locations in Switzerland as exogenous shifters of users' propensity to post content about their surfing activity onto an online social network. We exploit this variation to test whether users' social ties on the network have a causal effect on their content generation, and whether conent generation in turn has a similar causal effect on the users' abilty to form social ties. Economically significant causal effects of this kind can produce positive feedback that generate multiplier e¤ects to interventions that subsidize tie formation. We argue these interventions can therefore be the basis of a strategy by the rm to indirectly faciliate content generation on the site. The exogenous variation provided by wind speeds enable us to measure this feedback empirically and to assess the return on investment from such policies. We use a detailed dataset from an online social network that comprises the complete details of social tie formation and content generation on the site. The richness of he data enable us to control for several spurious confounds that have typically plagued empirical analysis of social interactions. Our results show evidence for significant positive feedback in user generated content. We discuss the implications of the estimates for the management of the content and the growth of the network.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2451/29522
Appears in Collections:NET Institute Working Papers Series

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Nair_09-28.pdf1.42 MBAdobe PDFView/Open


Items in FDA are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.