Crowdsourcing (1/2): What is it actually about?

Crowdsourcing is currently a very popular application of the concept of wisdom of crowds, namely the idea that large groups of people may ultimately know better than smaller groups of brilliant individuals. It is being increasingly used as an innovation tool by companies, the public sector and NPOs.

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However, there is still uncertainty over which challenges or specific problems can be solved by crowdsourcing. Then there is the issue of selecting a suitable crowdsourcing platform.

Therefore, crowdsourcing is often used in a suboptimal way. So it is no wonder that the outcomes are disappointing. What should be done in order for crowdsourcing to be used effectively?

How to create value with crowdsourcing

Firstly, what exactly is crowdsourcing? It is a knowledge management tool (another example of such a tool is brainstorming). Crowdsourcing involves taking a job from a designated agent (an employee) and outsourcing it usually to a large group in the form of an open call.

In other words, crowdsourcing isn’t only about a crowd. It involves:

  • outsourcing a job
  • aiming at a crowd of external contributors

Two approaches to crowdsourcing

So how this can be used to solve business challenges? We can reduce all possible crowdsourcing tasks to two main branches:

  1. adding capacity
  2. accessing expertise (crowdsourced innovation)

Both these branches have their own characteristic features. The rules of engagement for both also differ, according to the business2community.com website. Adding capacity means using a lot of people who can easily contribute to a subtask of some larger job. Accessing expertise is about idea generation and problem-solving.

-jk-

Article source business2community.com - open community for business professionals
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