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The Impact of Ideology on
Effectiveness in Open Source Software Development Teams
Katherine J. Stewart and
Sanjay Gosain
Abstract
The emerging work on
understanding open source software has questioned what leads to
effectiveness in OSS development teams in the absence of formal
controls, and it has pointed to the importance of ideology. This
paper develops a framework of the OSS community ideology (including
specific norms, beliefs, and values) and a theoretical model to show
how adherence to components of the ideology impacts effectiveness in
OSS teams. The model is based on the idea that the tenets of the
OSS ideology motivate behaviors that enhance cognitive trust and
communication quality and encourage identification with the project
team, which enhances affective trust. Trust and communication in
turn impact OSS team effectiveness. The research considers two
kinds of effectiveness in OSS teams: the attraction and retention
of developer input and the generation of project outputs. Hypotheses
regarding antecedents to each are developed. Hypotheses are tested
using survey and objective data on OSS projects. Results support
the main thesis that OSS team members’ adherence to the tenets of the
OSS community ideology impacts OSS team effectiveness and reveal that
different components impact effectiveness in different ways. Of
particular interest is the finding that adherence to some ideological
components was beneficial to the effectiveness of the team in terms of
attracting and retaining input, but detrimental to the output of the
team. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
Keywords: Open source
software, trust, ideology, communication, virtual teams
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