Motives, Gender, and Experience: Performance Effects in Crowdsourcing Contests

Published Online:https://doi.org/10.1287/stsc.2023.0068

Our study examines how individual characteristics—economic versus achievement-based motives, gender, and experience—moderate the “performance revision effect” in tournament-based crowdsourcing competitions. This effect refers to a phenomenon in which contestants reduce their effort when competing against significantly higher-ability opponents. Using data from Topcoder, a leading crowdsourcing platform, we conducted a quasiexperimental study with 1,677 coders in 38 single-round matches. Our regression discontinuity design exploits Topcoder’s skill-based divisions to assess contestants’ responses to differing opponent abilities. The results confirm the performance revision effect, revealing an average performance decline of 20% when contestants face higher-ability opponents. Moreover, female and more experienced participants show a stronger response to the performance revision effect than their male and less-experienced peers. Our findings contribute to the crowdsourcing literature by highlighting the boundary conditions of the performance revision effect and by quantifying the performance implications of contest designs for different contestants, allowing platform operators to make data-driven cost-benefit decisions about contest design to mitigate performance losses.

Supplemental Material: The online appendix is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/stsc.2023.0068.

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