Sustained Participation in Virtual Communities from a Self-Determination Perspective

Customers’ participation and contribution are vital to the sustainability of virtual communities (VCs) platform while people have many options to freely surf on the Internet. Sustained participation, instead of initial participation, is more meaningful to virtual communities’ sus...

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Main Author: Zhe Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-11-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/23/6547
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spelling doaj-8c43dd3a208f447b844aa164a2aaa8d52020-11-25T02:21:30ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502019-11-011123654710.3390/su11236547su11236547Sustained Participation in Virtual Communities from a Self-Determination PerspectiveZhe Zhang0School of Management, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, ChinaCustomers’ participation and contribution are vital to the sustainability of virtual communities (VCs) platform while people have many options to freely surf on the Internet. Sustained participation, instead of initial participation, is more meaningful to virtual communities’ sustained development. From the perspective of self-determination theory, this paper explores the effect of community artifacts on sustained participations through users’ satisfaction of psychological need and virtual community identification. With empirical studies in two types of virtual community platforms (interest-based and relational-based), our results reveal several important findings. Firstly, this study finds that virtual co-presence and deep profiling can increase users’ satisfaction of inner psychological needs. But the use of persistent labeling does not affect the user’s satisfaction of psychological needs. In addition, self-presentation is positively related to relational-based community, and rather has no impact on interest-based community. Secondly, this study finds that there exists a positive relationship between users’ satisfied psychological needs and virtual community identification. Finally, virtual community identification significantly impacts sustained participation. This paper offers a new perspective on the psychological mechanism of sustained participation and yields important implications for the managerial practice.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/23/6547sustained participationsustainabilityself-determination theoryvirtual community identificationbasic psychological needscommunity artifacts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhe Zhang
spellingShingle Zhe Zhang
Sustained Participation in Virtual Communities from a Self-Determination Perspective
Sustainability
sustained participation
sustainability
self-determination theory
virtual community identification
basic psychological needs
community artifacts
author_facet Zhe Zhang
author_sort Zhe Zhang
title Sustained Participation in Virtual Communities from a Self-Determination Perspective
title_short Sustained Participation in Virtual Communities from a Self-Determination Perspective
title_full Sustained Participation in Virtual Communities from a Self-Determination Perspective
title_fullStr Sustained Participation in Virtual Communities from a Self-Determination Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Sustained Participation in Virtual Communities from a Self-Determination Perspective
title_sort sustained participation in virtual communities from a self-determination perspective
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Customers’ participation and contribution are vital to the sustainability of virtual communities (VCs) platform while people have many options to freely surf on the Internet. Sustained participation, instead of initial participation, is more meaningful to virtual communities’ sustained development. From the perspective of self-determination theory, this paper explores the effect of community artifacts on sustained participations through users’ satisfaction of psychological need and virtual community identification. With empirical studies in two types of virtual community platforms (interest-based and relational-based), our results reveal several important findings. Firstly, this study finds that virtual co-presence and deep profiling can increase users’ satisfaction of inner psychological needs. But the use of persistent labeling does not affect the user’s satisfaction of psychological needs. In addition, self-presentation is positively related to relational-based community, and rather has no impact on interest-based community. Secondly, this study finds that there exists a positive relationship between users’ satisfied psychological needs and virtual community identification. Finally, virtual community identification significantly impacts sustained participation. This paper offers a new perspective on the psychological mechanism of sustained participation and yields important implications for the managerial practice.
topic sustained participation
sustainability
self-determination theory
virtual community identification
basic psychological needs
community artifacts
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/23/6547
work_keys_str_mv AT zhezhang sustainedparticipationinvirtualcommunitiesfromaselfdeterminationperspective
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