Satisfying Heterogeneous User Needs via Innovation Toolkits: The Case of Apache Security Software
Preprint
- 1 January 2002
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
User needs for a given product type can be quite heterogeneous. Segmenting the market and providing solutions for average user needs in each segment is a partial answer that will typically leave many dissatisfied - some seriously so. We hypothesize that providing users with "toolkits for user innovation" to enable them to more easily design customized products for themselves will increase user satisfaction under these conditions. We test this hypothesis via an empirical study of Apache security software - "open source" software that is designed to be modifiable by skilled users. We find that heterogeneity of need is high, and that many Apache users are dissatisfied with standard security functionality on offer. We also find that users creating their own software modifications are significantly more satisfied than are non-innovating users. We conclude by suggesting that the "toolkits for user innovation" approach to enhancing user satisfaction might be generally applicable to markets characterized by heterogeneous user needs.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Willingness to Pay for Urban Greenway ProjectsJournal of the American Planning Association, 1999
- Private construction as a general indicator of urban development: The case of IsraelInternational Planning Studies, 1999
- Contingent Valuation and Real Economic Commitments: A Private Good ExperimentJournal of Environmental Planning and Management, 1998
- Validity of open-ended and payment scale approaches to eliciting willingness to payApplied Economics, 1997
- Productivity in Hospital KitchensThe Service Industries Journal, 1996
- Absorptive Capacity: A New Perspective on Learning and InnovationAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1990
- Strategic groups: Untested assertions and research proposalsManagerial and Decision Economics, 1990
- The Role of Knowledge in R&D EfficiencyThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1982
- Bootstrap Methods: Another Look at the JackknifeThe Annals of Statistics, 1979
- Price as an Indicator of Quality: Report on an EnquiryEconomica, 1966