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  1. Which crowdsourcing business model will prevail?

    We are routinely asked by universities and business executives what we see coming next in crowdsourcing. As we watch the evolution of crowd-powered business, there are three models we see bubbling to the surface: core crowdsourcing companies crowdsourcing hubs attached to major enterprises and crowds for hire where organizations can post calls to pre-existing communities.
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  2. Crowdsourcing Definition #1: What is Collective Intelligence?

    For a business shift that’s about inviting in non-experts, hobbyists and hackers, there’s a lot of insider lingo around crowdsourcing. This begins the first of a series of straight talk on crowdsourcing principles to help us all put the theory into practice.

    What is collective intelligence? Jeff Howe, the guy that came up with the term crowdsourcing, says it this way, “A central principle animating crowdsourcing is that the group contains more knowledge than individuals.” James Suroweicki says, “Even if most of the people within a group are not especially well-informed or rational, it can still reach a collectively wise decision.” This is the science that explains why when asked for a lifeline on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, the crowd guesses 91% correctly, whereas experts have a 61% likelihood of getting the right answer. The answers that come from crowdsourcing are called collective intelligence or wisdom of crowds. Yes, two terms for the same thing.
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