TY - BOOK AU - Hunter, Samuel T. AU - Blocker, Lily D. | Gutworth, Melissa B. | Allen, Julian TI - Why we Support some Original Ideas but Reject Others: : An Application of Signaling Theory (Journal Article) SN - 0022-0175 PY - 2022/// CY - Hoboken,NJ PB - : Wiley Subscription Services Inc. KW - Pitch| Signaling| Pitch Quality| Product| Bias against Creativity N1 - ***______{For Hard Copy, Please visit Library.}________*** N2 - Abstract: Although organizations say new ideas are desirable, investing in original products rather than the “tried and true” can be unsettling for decision-makers. This discomfort may be due, in part, to uncertainty surrounding whether a new idea will prove successful. As such, the originality of a creative idea can be paradoxically viewed both as an asset, driving up appeal, as well as a detrimental risk. To help unpack these relationships, we propose that how an original idea is proposed (i.e., pitched) plays a central role in the support it receives. Guided by signaling theory we examined how pitch quality relates to funding for ideas with varying degrees of originality. In a field sample of 245 Kickstarter crowdfunding campaigns, pitch quality for ideas high in originality predicted investment in such ideas. In a follow-up experimental study, we created high- and low-quality pitches for two products, also varying product originality and product quality. Results highlight the importance of high-quality pitches for highly original ideas that are associated with reductions in uncertainty. Supplemental analyses suggest that high-quality pitches improve enthusiasm for a product as well, highlighting a potential second path of support influence UR - https://doi.org/10.1002/jocb.570 ER -