Collaborative Service Innovation: A Quantitative Analysis of Innovation Networks in a Multisectoral Setting
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- Analysis of each criterion that play a part in the different conceptual layers of a PSIN and its outcomes. Complementary, the study of PSINs and their relationship with innovation. Here, the integration of technological (product, service, process) and nontechnological (organizational, market, input) innovations [4] requires special attention.
- (2)
- Design of the experiment (survey) according to each criterion and its scale, and determination of the sample size.
- (3)
- Analysis of the theoretical and empirical modes of measurement of each criterion.
- (4)
- Controlling for potential biases, particularly Common Method Variance.
- (5)
- Assessment of the measurement model, including validity, reliability, and collinearity of the measuring indicators of each criterion.
- (6)
- Building higher order components to ease the interpretation and visualization of criteria and their impacts.
- (7)
- Assessment of the structural model, including coefficients of determination, and predictive relevance.
- (8)
- Identification of observable and unobservable heterogeneity.
1.1. Theoretical Framework and Hypotheses
1.2. The Agents Component of the PSINs Model
1.3. The Social Component of the PSINs Model
1.4. The Functioning Mode Component of the PSINs Model
1.5. The Outcome and Innovation Components of the PSINs Model
- (1)
- Nontechnological (vs. technological) innovation, as PSINs produce soft types of outcomes.
- (2)
- Nonsystematic (vs. systematic or step-by-step) innovations, at least until the partners of the network decide on their next steps.
- (3)
- Strategy or policy, mindset, way-of-doing-things (vs. product, service, process) innovations, even though PSINs often must develop products or processes, or new integrations of existing products, to implement their innovations.
- (4)
- Unclear (vs. well identified) solutions given the blurred context and undefined nature of the wicked problems PSINs face.
- (5)
- Adopted (vs. original) innovation, since many PSINs are born from earlier experiences in other geographies or sectors.
- (6)
- Radical (vs. incremental) innovation. This criterion refers as well to the accumulation of several incremental innovations, described here by the other five criteria, rather than the development of disruptive changes or outcomes, in the Schumpeterian sense.
2. Methodology
2.1. Conceptual Support for Our Indicators
2.2. Survey Participants
2.3. Measurement
2.4. Measurement Modes of PSINs Criteria
2.5. Criteria, Manifest Indicators, and Hierarchical Component Modelling
- (1)
- We need to follow the repeated indicators approach to, first, identify the linear relationships (paths) of the indicators and their composite criteria (Figure 3). Each LOC criterion is the result of a linear combination of its indicators (x1, … xn) and their weights (w1, … wn), or:Second, we must obtain the latent variable scores (LVS) of our LOCs and HOCs—single-item measures calculated from the multi-item measurement of each criterion, assuming equal weights for each item (Figure 4).
- (2)
- We calculate the path scores between the LOCs and the Social and Actors HOCs, using the PLS-SEM algorithm over the new model (Figure 4) built with the LVS.
- (3)
- We need to repeat the two-stage process described in steps 1 and 2 for third-order component (PSINs) (Figure 5). The LVS also allow us to analyze the relationship between the PSINs and the endogenous Outcome, and the combined effect of PSINs and Life Cycle on Innovation.
2.6. Control for Common Method Variance
3. Results
3.1. Measurement Model Assessment of Reflective Criteria (Mode A)
3.2. Measurement Model Assessment of Formative Criteria
3.3. Structural Model Assessment
Path Coefficients | F-Squared | VIF | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2nd order variables | |||||
Actors | Collaboration → Actors | 0.856 *** | 179.861 +++ | 1.877 | |
Motivation → Actors | 0.168 ** | 12.654 +++ | 1.029 | ||
Relevance → Actors | 0.219 ** | 14.642 +++ | 1.503 | ||
Types → Actors | −0.023 ^ | 0.117 + | 2.106 | ||
Social | Engagement → Social | 0.767 *** | 231.444 +++ | 1.204 | |
Measurement → Social | 0.119 *** | 5.998 +++ | 1.127 | ||
Type-project → Social | 0.376 *** | 59.858 +++ | 1.118 | ||
Wicked → Social | 0.044 ** | 0.856 +++ | 1.053 | ||
3rd order variables | |||||
PSINs | Actors → PSINs | 0.126 *** | 0.441 +++ | 1.000 | |
Functioning-mode → PSINs | 0.258 *** | 2.772 +++ | 1.000 | ||
Social → PSINs | 0.799 *** | 17.013 +++ | 1.000 | ||
Innovation | Life-cycle → Innovation | −0.144 ** | 0.024 + | 1.000 | |
PSINs → Innovation | 0.360 *** | 0.151 ++ | 1.000 | ||
Outcome | PSINs → Outcome | 0.458 *** | 0.265 ++ | 1.000 | |
Model’s Fit | |||||
R Square | Q Square | q Square | |||
Actors | 0.998 | 0.981 | large | ||
Innovation | 0.147 | 0.143 | small | ||
Outcome | 0.209 | 0.198 | medium | ||
PSINs | 0.978 | 0.969 | large | ||
Social | 0.998 | 0.989 | large | ||
SRMR: 0.000 |
3.4. Moderation Effects
3.5. Unobserved Heterogeneity
3.6. Findings
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Geographical Level | Frequency | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Municipal | 86 | 37% |
Regional | 81 | 35% |
Cross-regional | 19 | 8% |
National | 47 | 20% |
Participants’ entities | ||
Non-religious private agency, foundation, association or entity | 95 | 41% |
Not working in any or working autonomously | 10 | 4% |
Public administration, agency or entity | 121 | 52% |
Religious foundation, association or entity | 4 | 2% |
Union | 3 | 1% |
Relationships | CLC Estimation Path Coefficient | Original Path Coefficient | CLC Estimation T Statistics | Original T Statistics | CLC Estimation p Values | p Values |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Life cycle → Innovation | −0.112 | −0.125 | 1.856 | 2.205 | 0.064 | 0.028 |
PSINs → Innovation | 0.371 | 0.389 | 6.449 | 7.113 | 0.000 | 0.000 |
PSINs → Outcome | 0.410 | 0.418 | 7.437 | 7.635 | 0.000 | 0.000 |
p-value of the difference of CLC and Original paths (Levene’s test): 0.251 | ||||||
CLC Estimation R Square | Original R Square | |||||
Innovation | 0.177 | 0.168 | ||||
Outcome | 0.180 | 0.174 |
Original Sample | Mean | STDEV | VIF | Crombach’s Alpha | rho_A | Composite Reliability | Average Variance Extracted (AVE) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ACTORS03[AC15] ← Relevance | 0.588 *** | 0.549 | 0.150 | 1.244 | 0.581 | 0.649 | 0.773 | 0.535 |
ACTORS03[AC16] ← Relevance | 0.620 *** | 0.618 | 0.159 | 1.201 | ||||
ACTORS03[AC17] ← Relevance | 0.883 *** | 0.850 | 0.107 | 1.220 | ||||
ACTORS04 ← Relationship | 1.000 | 1.000 | 0.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 |
ACTORS06[AC27] ← Feeling | 1.000 | 1.000 | 0.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 |
ACTORS07 ← Intensity | 1.000 | 1.000 | 0.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 |
INNTYP01[IT03] ← Innovation | 0.728 *** | 0.721 | 0.064 | 1.332 | 0.692 | 0.730 | 0.810 | 0.520 |
INNTYP01[IT04] ← Innovation | 0.747 *** | 0.737 | 0.073 | 1.348 | ||||
INNTYP01[IT05] ← Innovation | 0.593 *** | 0.598 | 0.113 | 1.188 | ||||
INNTYP01[IT06] ← Innovation | 0.804 *** | 0.791 | 0.044 | 1.446 | ||||
MODORG04[MO23] ← Measurement | 0.839 *** | 0.771 | 0.219 | 1.142 | 0.521 | 0.526 | 0.806 | 0.676 |
MODORG04[MO24] ← Measurement | 0.805 *** | 0.800 | 0.224 | 1.142 | ||||
STAGE01 ← Life-cycle | 1.000 | 1.000 | 0.000 | 1.233 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 |
Heterotrait-Monotrait Ratio (HTMT) | ||||||||
Feeling | Innovation | Intensity | Life-Cycle | Measurement | Motivation | Relationship | ||
Feeling | ||||||||
Innovation | 0.072 | |||||||
Intensity | 0.050 | 0.260 | ||||||
Life-cycle | 0.080 | 0.159 | 0.285 | |||||
Measurement | 0.095 | 0.327 | 0.057 | 0.094 | ||||
Motivation | 0.043 | 0.250 | 0.101 | 0.028 | 0.117 | |||
Relationship | 0.075 | 0.155 | 0.150 | 0.024 | 0.055 | 0.052 | ||
Relevance | 0.159 | 0.228 | 0.130 | 0.101 | 0.245 | 0.089 | 0.014 |
Original Sample | Mean | STDEV | VIF | |
---|---|---|---|---|
ACTORS01[AC01] → Types | 0.121 ^ | 0.131 | 0.090 | 1.181 |
ACTORS01[AC02] → Types | 0.251 *** | 0.238 | 0.075 | 1.161 |
ACTORS01[AC11] → Types | 0.895 *** | 0.888 | 0.047 | 1.041 |
ACTORS05[AC20] → Collaboration | 0.238 ^ | 0.241 | 0.139 | 1.951 |
ACTORS05[AC21] → Collaboration | 0.286 ^ | 0.260 | 0.152 | 1.991 |
ACTORS05[AC22] → Collaboration | 0.547 *** | 0.548 | 0.109 | 1.649 |
ACTORS05[AC23] → Collaboration | 0.156 ^ | 0.160 | 0.121 | 1.258 |
FUNCTI03[FU06] → Functioning-mode | 0.337 ^ | 0.344 | 0.271 | 1.048 |
FUNCTI03[FU09] → Functioning-mode | 1.016 *** | 0.965 | 0.100 | 1.048 |
MODORG01[MO01] → Type-project | 0.469 ** | 0.429 | 0.229 | 1.010 |
MODORG01[MO06] → Type-project | 0.355 ^ | 0.345 | 0.266 | 1.142 |
MODORG01[MO07] → Type-project | 0.649 ** | 0.597 | 0.222 | 1.139 |
MODORG02[MO09] → Wicked | 0.496 * | 0.458 | 0.267 | 1.255 |
MODORG02[MO14] → Wicked | 0.366 * | 0.348 | 0.220 | 1.227 |
MODORG02[MO16] → Wicked | 0.558 ** | 0.536 | 0.214 | 1.038 |
MODORG05[MO28] → Engagement | 0.379 *** | 0.366 | 0.106 | 1.351 |
MODORG05[MO29] → Engagement | 0.632 *** | 0.634 | 0.102 | 1.458 |
MODORG05[MO30] → Engagement | 0.214 ** | 0.216 | 0.107 | 1.306 |
MOTIVA01[MO03] → Motivation | 1.000 | 1.000 | 0.000 | 1.000 |
OUTCOM01[OU01] → Outcome | 0.084 ^ | 0.138 | 0.201 | 1.674 |
OUTCOM01[OU03] → Outcome | 0.401 * | 0.443 | 0.223 | 1.279 |
OUTCOM01[OU04] → Outcome | 0.304 ^ | 0.191 | 0.283 | 1.578 |
OUTCOM01[OU05] → Outcome | 0.113 ^ | 0.112 | 0.218 | 1.842 |
OUTCOM01[OU07] → Outcome | 0.425 * | 0.358 | 0.225 | 1.638 |
OUTCOM01[OU08] → Outcome | 0.059 ^ | −0.015 | 0.286 | 1.614 |
Health [MO09] | Configural Invariance | C | 5.0%-Quantile of Cu | Compositional Invariance | Mean Difference | CI 2.5% | CI 97.5% | Equal Mean Values | Variance Difference | CI 2.5% | CI 97.5% | Equal Variances | Measurement Invariance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Innovation | Yes | 1 | 1 | Yes | −0.096 | −0.406 | 0.376 | Yes | −0.051 | −0.48 | 0.754 | Yes | Full |
Life-cycle | Yes | 1 | 1 | Yes | 0.143 | −0.424 | 0.37 | Yes | 0.257 | −0.487 | 0.696 | Yes | Full |
Outcome | Yes | 1 | 1 | Yes | −0.181 | −0.369 | 0.4 | Yes | −0.027 | −0.578 | 0.669 | Yes | Full |
PSINs | Yes | 1 | 1 | Yes | −0.375 | −0.4 | 0.393 | Yes | 0.025 | −0.395 | 0.611 | Yes | Full |
R-Squared | |||||||||||||
Health group | |||||||||||||
Innovation | 0.336 | ||||||||||||
Outcome | 0.712 | ||||||||||||
Rest group | |||||||||||||
Innovation | 0.346 | ||||||||||||
Outcome | 0.441 |
Configurational Invariance | C | 5.0%-Quantile of Cu | Compositional Invariance | Mean Difference | CI 2.5% | CI 97.5% | Equal Mean Values | Variance Difference | CI 2.5% | CI 97.5% | Equal Variances | Measurement Invariance | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Innovation | Yes | 1 | 1 | Yes | 0.044 | −0.293 | 0.247 | Yes | 0.109 | −0.383 | 0.378 | Yes | Full |
Life-cycle | Yes | 1 | 1 | Yes | −0.197 | −0.247 | 0.253 | Yes | −0.477 | −0.406 | 0.366 | No | Partial (*) |
Outcome | Yes | 1 | 1 | Yes | 0.2 | −0.254 | 0.273 | Yes | −0.046 | −0.419 | 0.401 | Yes | Full |
PSINs | Yes | 1 | 1 | Yes | −0.108 | −0.243 | 0.251 | Yes | 0.073 | −0.319 | 0.311 | Yes | Full |
Segment1 Path Coefficients | Segment2 Path Coefficients | PLS-MGA Path Coefficients-Diff between Segments | |||||||||||
Life-cycle → Innovation | −0.717 | 0.276 | −0.993 *** | ||||||||||
PSINs → Innovation | 0.157 | 0.651 | −0.494 *** | ||||||||||
PSINs → Outcome | 0.453 | 0.477 | −0.024 | ||||||||||
Innovation R2 | 0.501 | 0.478 | |||||||||||
Outcome R2 | 0.205 | 0.227 |
Construct | Item | Item Question | Scale |
---|---|---|---|
RELATIONSHIP | Beyond the intensity, how would you rate the importance of the contribution of universities to achieve that group’s goals? | Likert—5 | |
RELEVANCE | Beyond the intensity, how would you rate the importance of the contribution of universities to achieve that group’s goals? | Likert—5 | |
Beyond the intensity, how would you rate the importance of the contribution of Public administrations to achieve that group’s goals? | Likert—5 | ||
Beyond the intensity, how would you rate the importance of the contribution of Services firms to achieve that group’s goals? | Likert—5 | ||
ACTORS03[AC15] | Beyond the intensity, how would you rate the importance of the contribution of Industrial or agricultural companies to achieve that group’s goals? | Likert—5 | |
ACTORS03[AC16] | Beyond the intensity, how would you rate the importance of the contribution of NGOs, foundations, associations and unions to achieve that group’s goals? | Likert—5 | |
ACTORS03[AC17] | Beyond the intensity, how would you rate the importance of the contribution of Users/citizens to achieve that group’s goals? | Likert—5 | |
ACTORS04 | Which was the most common type of relationships among agents in your group? Bilateral meetings; Multi-party meetings | Binary—Y/N | |
In that group you are describing, you felt … less committed to the other agents in the group than if you had worked with them outside it | Likert—5 | ||
ACTORS06[AC27] | In that group you are describing, you felt … your group did not really consider the users’ preferences | Likert—5 | |
In that group you are describing, you felt … your group was more focused on performance than innovation | Likert—5 | ||
ACTORS07 | The group you have been describing in this survey is… a permanent (i.e., intended to last indefinitely) group; a temporary (i.e., time-limited) group | Binary—Y/N | |
INNOVATION | The main type of goal of this group you are describing was… a technical, market or industrial innovation—e.g., prototype, tender, patent, regulation, or norm; a non-technical, service innovation OR a combination of technical and non-technical innovation—e.g., a policy, improve or creation of a service, digitalization, new organization, new process | Binary—Y/N | |
The innovation/s of the group you are describing were mainly… planned (step-by-step) innovation, with little deviances from the plan; unplanned (spontaneous) innovation; a combination of planned and unplanned | Binary—Y/N | ||
Please, describe the scale of the changes produced by that group in… a product | Categorical—3 | ||
Please, describe the scale of the changes produced by that group in… a process | Categorical—3 | ||
INNTYP01[IT03] | Please, describe the scale of the changes produced by that group in… an organization or group of people | Categorical—3 | |
INNTYP01[IT04] | Please, describe the scale of the changes produced by that group in… a concept or idea | Categorical—3 | |
INNTYP01[IT05] | Please, describe the scale of the changes produced by that group in… a strategy or policy | Categorical—3 | |
INNTYP01[IT06] | Please, describe the scale of the changes produced by that group in… how people usually think | Categorical—3 | |
Please, describe the scale of the changes produced by that group in… how things are traditionally done | Categorical—3 | ||
Please, describe the scale of the changes produced by that group in… a service | Categorical—3 | ||
The type of problems that group wanted to solve was… mostly well identified and allowing a rather well-defined solution; mostly un-identified, and needing experimentation and an unclear combination of solutions or approaches | Binary—Y/N | ||
The innovation your group aimed for was… adopted or seen somewhere else; produced or originated in the group | Binary—Y/N | ||
MEASUREMENT | MODORG04[MO23] | In the innovations or developments produced by that group you are describing, did you measure…? Outputs like productivity, efficiency, units produced or similar | Binary—Y/N |
MODORG04[MO24] | In the innovations or developments produced by that group you are describing, did you measure…? Outcomes like costs, returns, value added, revenue | Binary—Y/N | |
In the innovations or developments produced by that group you are describing, did you measure…? Indicators of relations like equality, justice, inclusion, service quality | Binary—Y/N | ||
INTENSITY | ACTORS07[AC29] | The group you have been describing in this survey is… a permanent (i.e., intended to last indefinitely) group | List(radio) |
ACTORS07[AC30] | The group you have been describing in this survey is… a temporary (i.e., time-limited) group | List(radio) | |
LIFE-CYCLE | STAGE01[ST01] | Which is the stage of that group to develop public services? … In the early stages, still organizing who, what, when, etc. | List(radio) |
STAGE01[ST01] | Which is the stage of that group to develop public services? … Mid-stage, we are progressing now but still have some roughness in our progress | List(radio) | |
STAGE01[ST02] | Which is the stage of that group to develop public services? … Mature stage, we have achieved some main successes and we are flowing | List(radio) | |
STAGE01[ST02] | Which is the stage of that group to develop public services? … End stage, the network is already stopping because it achieved its goals | List(radio) | |
STAGE01[ST02] | Which is the stage of that group to develop public services? … Decline stage, only a few or no one really cares about the network | List(radio) | |
Weights | |||
TYPES | ACTORS01[AC01] | Which was the intensity of the participation of universities in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 |
ACTORS01[AC02] | Which was the intensity of the participation of Research laboratories or institutes in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 | |
Which was the intensity of the participation of Local public administration in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 | ||
Which was the intensity of the participation of Regional public administration in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 | ||
Which was the intensity of the participation of National public administration in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 | ||
Which was the intensity of the participation of Consultant firms in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 | ||
Which was the intensity of the participation of Financial services firms in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 | ||
Which was the intensity of the participation of Services firms (any other type) in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 | ||
Which was the intensity of the participation of Industrial, construction, agricultural industries in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 | ||
Which was the intensity of the participation of NGOs, foundations, associations and unions in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 | ||
ACTORS01[AC11] | Which was the intensity of the participation of Users/citizens in that network you are describing? | Likert—5 | |
COLLABORATION | That group you are describing… included end users/citizens in idea generation or prototyping sessions | Likert—5 | |
ACTORS05[AC21] | That group you are describing… included end users/citizens in services or processes co-production/co-implementation | Likert—5 | |
ACTORS05[AC22] | That group you are describing… included end users in the analysis of data on their experiences | Likert—5 | |
ACTORS05[AC23] | That group you are describing… included other agents (consultants, technical staff or any other) in idea generation or prototyping sessions | Likert—5 | |
That group you are describing… included other agents (consultants, technical staff or any other) in services or processes co-production/co-implementation | Likert—5 | ||
ACTORS05[AC25] | That group you are describing… worked with users’ representatives (e.g., NGOs, associations) more than with individual end users or citizens | Likert—5 | |
FUNCTIONING-MODE | That group you are describing was… part of a formal plan (e.g., tender, norm); emerged spontaneously, not related to any formal plan | Y/N | |
That group functioned… With a vertical, hierarchical, or top-down mode; With a horizontal, collaborative, or bottom-up mode | Y/N | ||
FUNCTI03[FU06] | In that group you are describing, there was… trust instead of bureaucracy | Likert—5 | |
In that group you are describing, there was… collaboration instead of orders | Likert—5 | ||
In that group you are describing, there was… all agents managed together the risk of disclosure | Likert—5 | ||
FUNCTI03[FU09] | In that group you are describing, there was… contracts formalized the arrangements between agents | Likert—5 | |
The role of the main public agent in that group was… proponent or central authority of the project; second to a proposing non-public agent, but actively supporting and facilitating the project; passively supporting private agents; no public agents | Binary—Y/N | ||
TYPE-PROJECT | MODORG01[MO01] | Deepening in the goals of that group you are describing, you and the rest of its members aimed for… the design of a public service | Likert—5 |
Deepening in the goals of that group you are describing, you and the rest of its members aimed for… the delivery of a public service | Likert—5 | ||
Deepening in the goals of that group you are describing, you and the rest of its members aimed for… a private product or service | Likert—5 | ||
Deepening in the goals of that group you are describing, you and the rest of its members aimed for… the rationalization of a process (e.g., of production) | Likert—5 | ||
Deepening in the goals of that group you are describing, you and the rest of its members aimed for… the adoption of a technical system or a process | Likert—5 | ||
MODORG01[MO06] | Deepening in the goals of that group you are describing, you and the rest of its members aimed for… new paths to achieve the group’s goals, free from the established or bureaucratic procedures | Likert—5 | |
MODORG01[MO07] | Deepening in the goals of that group you are describing, you and the rest of its members aimed for… the integration of products in services | Likert—5 | |
WICKED | MODORG02[MO09] | Speaking of social problems or needs, which of the following were addressed by that group you are describing? … Health | Binary—Y/N |
Speaking of social problems or needs, which of the following were addressed by that group you are describing? … Aging | Binary—Y/N | ||
Speaking of social problems or needs, which of the following were addressed by that group you are describing? … Education/training | Binary—Y/N | ||
Speaking of social problems or needs, which of the following were addressed by that group you are describing? … Transportation and mobility | Binary—Y/N | ||
Speaking of social problems or needs, which of the following were addressed by that group you are describing? … Environment and urban problems | Binary—Y/N | ||
MODORG02[MO14] | Speaking of social problems or needs, which of the following were addressed by that group you are describing? … Security | Binary—Y/N | |
Speaking of social problems or needs, which of the following were addressed by that group you are describing? … Employment | Binary—Y/N | ||
MODORG02[MO16] | Speaking of social problems or needs, which of the following were addressed by that group you are describing? … Women/minorities/excluded populations | Binary—Y/N | |
Speaking of social problems or needs, which of the following were addressed by that group you are describing? … Childhood/youth | Binary—Y/N | ||
ENGAGEMENT | Did your group …? evaluated the actual engagement of users/citizens | Likert—5 | |
MODORG05[MO28] | Did your group …? assessed user/citizen satisfaction with the service or process, pre- and post-innovation | Likert—5 | |
MODORG05[MO29] | Did your group …? improved the assessment of the needs of users/citizens because they were de-facto members of the network | Likert—5 | |
MODORG05[MO30] | Did your group …? studied the needs of users/citizens using market research techniques | Likert—5 | |
FUNCTIONING-MODE | Did your group arrange …? around a central entity; based on trust, reputation and/or earlier collaboration among some main entities | Binary—Y/N | |
MOTIVATION | You decided to embark in your last group to develop services due to … your manager suggested it | Binary—Y/N | |
You decided to embark in your last group to develop services due to … the group aimed to develop or innovate a particular service | Binary—Y/N | ||
MOTIVA01[MO03] | You decided to embark in your last group to develop services due to … your unit is dedicated to this type of projects | Binary—Y/N | |
You decided to embark in your last group to develop services due to … you were following confirmed political guidelines | Binary—Y/N | ||
You decided to embark in your last group to develop services due to … it was an open group willing to admit everyone interested | Binary—Y/N | ||
OUTCOME | OUTCOM01[OU01] | Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … design time | Likert—5 |
Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … ability to target user needs | Likert—5 | ||
OUTCOM01[OU03] | Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … number of citizens able to access the service | Likert—5 | |
OUTCOM01[OU04] | Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … user experience of the service | Likert—5 | |
OUTCOM01[OU05] | Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … implementation time | Likert—5 | |
Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … user access to information | Likert—5 | ||
OUTCOM01[OU07] | Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … employee satisfaction/working conditions | Likert—5 | |
OUTCOM01[OU08] | Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … service quality | Likert—5 | |
Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … Procedures | Likert—5 | ||
Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … Costs | Likert—5 | ||
Thinking on that last group of public service innovation, how would you rate its outcomes? … fit of services and technical requirements (time, resources, effectiveness, etc.) | Likert—5 |
References
- Desmarchelier, B.; Djellal, F.; Gallouj, F. Public Service Innovation Networks (PSINs): An Instrument for Collaborative Innovation and Value Co-Creation in Public Service(s). 2018. Available online: https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01934284 (accessed on 30 May 2021).
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Direct Effect Segment 1 | Total Effect = Direct + Indirect Segment 1 | Direct Path Segment 2 | Total Effect = Direct + Indirect Segment 2 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Outcome → Innovation | −0.090 * | −0.090 * | 0.097 * | 0.097 * |
PSINs → Innovation | 0.196 *** | 0.155 ** | 0.603 *** | 0.650 *** |
PSINs → Outcome | 0.453 *** | 0.453 *** | 0.477 *** | 0.477 *** |
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Peralta, A.; Rubalcaba, L. Collaborative Service Innovation: A Quantitative Analysis of Innovation Networks in a Multisectoral Setting. Mathematics 2021, 9, 1270. https://doi.org/10.3390/math9111270
Peralta A, Rubalcaba L. Collaborative Service Innovation: A Quantitative Analysis of Innovation Networks in a Multisectoral Setting. Mathematics. 2021; 9(11):1270. https://doi.org/10.3390/math9111270
Chicago/Turabian StylePeralta, Alberto, and Luis Rubalcaba. 2021. "Collaborative Service Innovation: A Quantitative Analysis of Innovation Networks in a Multisectoral Setting" Mathematics 9, no. 11: 1270. https://doi.org/10.3390/math9111270
APA StylePeralta, A., & Rubalcaba, L. (2021). Collaborative Service Innovation: A Quantitative Analysis of Innovation Networks in a Multisectoral Setting. Mathematics, 9(11), 1270. https://doi.org/10.3390/math9111270