BNET Briefing

What Is Crowdsourcing?

Tags: Crowdsourcing, iStockphoto.com, Jennifer Alsever, Procter & Gamble Co., NetFlix Inc., E. I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co., Amazon.com Inc., Collective Wisdom, BNET Briefing, Software, Weak Spots Crowds

Despite the jargony name, crowdsourcing is a very real and important business idea. Definitions and terms vary, but the basic idea is to tap into the collective intelligence of the public at large to complete business-related tasks that a company would normally either perform itself or outsource to a third-party provider. Yet free labor is only a narrow part of crowdsourcing's appeal. More importantly, it enables managers to expand the size of their talent pool while also gaining deeper insight into what customers really want.

Key Stats

  • Buzzword coined: 2006
  • Also known as: Fansourcing, crowdcasting, open sourcing, open innovation, crowdfunding, mass collaboration, collective customer commitment, wikinomics
  • Enabling technologies: Email, blogs, wikis, online forums and mailing lists, Internet services such as YouTube and MySpace
  • Current practitioners: Procter & Gamble, Chipotle, Amazon, Eli Lilly, CafePress, and many more
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Why It Matters Now:

With the rise of user-generated media such as blogs, Wikipedia, MySpace, and YouTube, it's clear that traditional distinctions between producers and consumers are becoming blurry. It's no longer fanciful to speak of the marketplace as having a "collective intelligence"—today that knowledge, passion, creativity, and insight are accessible for all to see. As Time explained after choosing the collective "You" as the magazine's 2006 Person of the Year, "We're looking at an explosion of productivity and innovation, and it's just getting started, as millions of minds that would otherwise have drowned in obscurity get backhauled into the global intellectual economy."

The idea of soliciting customer input is hardly new, of course, and the open-source software movement showed that it can be done with large numbers of people. The difference is that today's technology makes it possible to enlist ever-larger numbers of non-technical people to do ever-more complex and creative tasks, at significantly reduced cost.

Why It Matters to You

With a deft touch and a clear set of objectives, quite literally thousands of people can and want to help your business. From designing ad campaigns to vetting new product ideas to solving difficult R&D problems, chances are that people outside your company walls can help you perform better in the marketplace; they become one more resource you can use to get work done. In return, most participants simply want some personal recognition, a sense of community, or at most, a financial incentive.

The Strong Points

Crowdsourcing can improve productivity and creativity while minimizing labor and research expenses. Using the Internet to solicit feedback from an active and passionate community of customers can reduce the amount of time spent collecting data through formal focus groups or trend research, while also seeding enthusiasm for upcoming products. By involving a cadre of customers in key marketing, branding, and product-development processes, managers can reduce both staffing costs and the risks associated with uncertain marketplace demand.

The Weak Spots

Crowds are not employees, so executives can't expect to control them. Indeed, while they may not ask for cash or in-kind products, participants will seek compensation in the form of satisfaction, recognition, and freedom. They will also demand time, attention, patience, good listening skills, transparency, and honesty. For traditional top-down organizations, this shift in management culture may prove difficult.

Key People

Like the concept itself, crowdsourcing belongs to no one person, but many have contributed to its evolution:

Jeff Howe, a contributing editor to Wired magazine, first coined the term "crowdsourcing" in a June 2006 article and writes the blog crowdsourcing.com.

Don Tapscott, a well-known business guru, has recently become an evangelist for mass collaboration in his book, Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything.

Key Practitioners

Netflix, the online video rental service, uses crowdsourcing techniques to improve the software algorithms used to offer customer video recommendations. The team or individual that achieves key software goals will receive $1 million.

Eli Lily and DuPont have tapped online networks of researchers and technical experts, awarding cash prizes to people who can solve vexing R&D problems.

CambrianHouse.com lets the public submit ideas for software products, vote on them, and collect royalties if a participant's ideas are incorporated into products.

iStockphoto.com allows amateur and professional photographers, illustrators, and videographers to upload their work and earn royalties when their images are bought and downloaded. The company was acquired for $50 million by Getty Images.

Threadless.com lets online members submit T-shirt designs and vote on which ones should be produced.

How to Talk About It

Crowdsourcing nomenclature is still in flux, but related terms include:

Ideagoras: Democratic marketplaces for innovation. Proctor & Gamble taps 90,000 chemists on Innocentive.com, a forum where scientists collaborate with companies to solve R&D problems in return for cash prizes.

Prosumers: Consumers who have also become producers, creating and building the products they use. The hit online game Second Life lets its user/residents write and implement software code to improve their virtual world.

Worksource: Tapping a crowd of people to complete repetitive tasks or piecework projects. Amazon's Mechanical Turk is a worksource initiative for tasks (such as sorting or classification) that are best served by human oversight.

Expertsource: A narrower form of crowdsourcing that involves soliciting input from technical experts in various fields.

Further Reading

Wikipedia: Written by a crowd of contributors, the Wikipedia definition of crowdsourcingincludes many examples of companies practicing the concept.

Crowdsourcing: A blog by Jeff Howe, contributing editor at Wired magazine, who coined the term in June 2006.

See also: Jeff Howe's Wired magazine article on crowdsourcing.

CambrianHouse.com press page: Lists new articles written globally on crowdsourcing.

Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything: A book by Don Tapscott and Anthony D. Williams that offers a guide for mass collaboration between customers, suppliers, and producers.

 
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  •  
    1

    viruser

    02/01/07 | Reported as spam

    I thought it was something else!

    :)) I thought it was an advertising term; one where a sales agent goes out in a crowd and shouts out his agenda!!
    Thanks for insight!!!

  •  
    2

    m.sethi@...

    02/14/07 | Report as spam

    CrowdSourcing

    Its like a Double edged sword. If you throw it open it can run a mess and get you defocused or the people contributing can feel offended if their ideas are not implemented, yet we loose the potential of a great idea if we don't. Tread with care...

  •  
    3

    skerett@...

    02/21/07 | Report as spam

    Powerfull Strategy

    This aproach to solve the most difficult problems can be use in many areas such as medicine, new boat design, etc. Think of this; How many times you think you have the solution to a problem or want to create something but there is no free container (website) that can provide you an opportunity to hear your contribution without going trough the 'red' tape.

  •  
    4

    catmylove@...

    03/01/07 | Report as spam

    Crowsourcing

    I believe is a great term, but at the end of the day it just works for the biggest bucks, yes we get improved items and services, but we also get biggest prices and with our ideas on them. By example, the big companies should fix the way they interact with costumers online, and why not to create a system where the costumers are more in the role, more prosumers, and get your ideas to the light, recognize your contribution publicly, either as a reward, as a special award, o0r making you a small investor, who knows, but there's gotta be the day where corporate affairs will be also a junction with public affairs.

  •  
    5

    krishand

    05/01/07 | Report as spam

    Just another feather into the web 2.0 evolution

    "Crowd sourcing" seems to be just another feather into the web 2.0 world of open communication, knowledge sharing and media news explosion.Seems to be having unparalleled options for a creative marketer for his services.

    Good Article,
    Krishan Dutt
    www.smartdatainc.net

  •  
    6

    jimantonopoulos

    05/01/07 | Report as spam

    I fail to understand...

    Isn't it just another name for social media?
    How is it any different to the way social media works?

  •  
    7

    mhamburg

    02/12/08 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Crowdsourcing?

    Nice summary. I too have researched the subject in depth and have written several articles on Crowdsourcing, which can be found here: http://www.onedegree.ca/monica_hamburg/

  •  
    8

    karunakarantk@...

    02/22/08 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Crowdsourcing?

    Really powerful and has a astrong potential in my opinion. I noticed the Answers section in linkedin where crowdsourcing is efficiently appiled. Those in Linkedin, dont you agree?

    Regards
    KK

  •  
    9

    jasmine@...

    02/22/08 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Crowdsourcing?

    Great article, Jennifer.
    Well written and fantastic points re: crowds aren't employees so they can't be treated as such.

    Anyone who decides to embrace crowdsourcing needs to find the magic sauce of encouraging participation... How to you attract the crowd and what are they getting in turn for their participation and wisdom. Reward and incentives programs are a must happy

    Cambrian House is releasing a "Crowdsourcing OS" this year that will enable anyone to attract and work with crowds to accomplish projects of any sort.

  •  
    10

    mosmeyer

    07/09/08 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Crowdsourcing?

    Thanks, Jennifer. Dell has also found some innovative ways to listen and collaborate with our customers. We launched www.ideastorm.com in February 2007, asking customers to tell Dell what new products or services they?d like to see us develop. Customer response has been fantastic -- the 9,400+ ideas posted on the site have been voted on by community members more than 644,000 times, and Dell has implemented around 50 of them. It's like having an open innovation lab with our customers. You might check out www.dell.com/community to check out what customers are saying on IdeaStorm, our blogs and in our community forums.

  •  
    11

    Yves Smith

    06/30/09 | Report as spam

    RE: What Is Crowdsourcing?

    Here is a useful article on the applications of crowdsourcing:

    http://datadiscoverers.com/research/?p=12

  •  
    12

    dgash

    11/03/09 | Report as spam

    Crowdsourcing benefits both client & crowd

    The biggest benefit we've found is that business clients are able to get better quality products/services within their budget. I work for Prova Advertising & we use crowdsourcing to help businesses get advertisements created. Crowdsourcing your advertisement design lets you select a design based on skill, instead of portfolio. Thus, the skilled designers stand out above the rest.

    -David
    Prova Advertising

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