Several years ago I invited subscribers to this email discussion list to 
complete a Web-based survey as part of  my PhD research. Since the data 
gathered were anonymous, I don’t know who the individual respondents were, 
which means I am sending this summary of the findings to the list.

I am very grateful to the people who took the time to complete the survey, and 
provided such interesting perspectives on what factors influenced their 
satisfaction with a free/libre and open source software project.

The abstract for the thesis is below, outlining the research method and 
summarising the main findings.

Abstract

The purpose of this research was to identify factors that affect participants’ 
satisfaction with their experience of a free/libre open source software (FLOSS) 
project. The research built on existing models of user satisfaction from the 
information systems literature, and also incorporated two characteristics of 
FLOSS projects first identified by Ye, Nakakoji, Yamamoto, and Kishida (2005), 
product openness and process
openness. The central research question it answered was, What factors influence 
participant satisfaction with a free/libre and open source application software 
project?

Richard Stallman’s reasons for setting up the GNU project and the Free Software 
Foundation arose from his frustration at being forced to be a passive user of 
software used for a Xerox printer. These suggest that being able to be an 
active participant in a FLOSS project is one factor that should be examined, 
and therefore the first sub-question this project answers is, What types of 
contributions do participants make to
free/libre and open source software projects?

Several studies have shown that the extent of participation in a FLOSS project 
varies from individual to individual, and this variation leads to the second 
sub-question, Do the factors that influence satisfaction vary for different 
types of participation? If so, in what way?

A preliminary conceptual model of factors affecting participant satisfaction 
was developed, reflecting the key concepts identified in the literature. The 
main theoretical goal of this research was to test the model using empirical 
data.

The research used a sequential, mixed methods approach. The first, qualitative 
stage involved reviewing documents from selected projects and interviewing a 
purposive sample of FLOSS project participants. The
second, quantitative stage involved an online survey of FLOSS project 
participants, and the data gathered were used to test the conceptual model.

The results of the first stage showed that participation in FLOSS projects was 
a more complex construct than previously reported in the literature. Seven 
distinct categories of activities were identified:

  *   use;
  *   interaction with code;
  *   supporting the community;
  *   outreach;
  *   sponsorship;
  *   management; and
  *   governance.

Four attributes that modified these categories were also identified: 
organisational focus, role formality, remuneration, and time commitment.

Data from 154 responses to the online survey were used to test the model using 
stepwise multiple regression, which determined the effect of each of the 
variables on overall participant satisfaction. Moderated regression analysis 
was used to test the effects of three potential moderating variables. The 
results showed that that perceived system complexity had the largest effect, 
decreasing satisfaciton if respondents perceived that the software was complex, 
while project openness and perceived developer communication quality accounted 
for the most variance in satisfaction.

The main theoretical contribution of this research lies in its extension of 
satisfaction studies to FLOSS communities, showing that communication and 
openness are more important than in conventional software
projects. Its practical contribution will help people involved in the 
management and governance of FLOSS projects to identify ways of increasing 
their participants’ satisfaction, which may in turn encourage them to 
contribute more.

The final version of the thesis is available in the VUW library’s research 
archive at:

http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/bitstream/handle/10063/1710/thesis.pdf?sequence=4

Thank you again to everyone who completed the survey. Please let me know if you 
have any questions about the research project.
--
Dr. Brenda Chawner
Senior Lecturer
School of Information Management
Victoria University of Wellington
P O Box 600, Wellington  NEW ZEALAND
(04) 463 5780 | fax (04) 463 5446 | Room RH423 | brenda.chaw...@vuw.ac.nz

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