Crowdsourcing: How the Power of the Crowd is Driving the Future of Business

Crowdsourcing: How the Power of the Crowd is Driving the Future of Business

by JeffHowe (Author)

Synopsis

Jeff Howe coined the word Crowdsourcing in a 2006 article for Wired magazine to describe the way in which the Internet has broken down traditional employer/employee relationships to create vibrant new enterprises that are staffed by informal, often large gatherings of enthusiasts. A few weeks before the article hit the newsstands, a Google search for the word Crowdsourcing returned zero results. One month after the article appeared, the same search returned nearly 500,000 hits. These days anyone and everyone can write book reviews on Amazon, post videos on Youtube, come up with new uses for Google maps or design T-shirts for Threadless. What makes this phenomenon so remarkable is that it is starting to transform the way many companies operate and to change their relationship with their customers- iStockPhoto.com has revolutionised the world of digital photography; Cambrian House is having a profound impact on the way films get made; Second Life has created a vast, profitable business with only a few formal employees but thousands of dedicated contributors. Moreover this revolution is rapidly changing our culture, introducing a consumer democracy that has never existed befo

$10.45

Save:$4.78 (31%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Edition: Airport / Export ed
Publisher: Random House Business Books
Published: 04 Sep 2008

ISBN 10: 1905211120
ISBN 13: 9781905211128
Book Overview: First there was The Long Tail. Now Crowdsourcing defines the next Internet revolution.

Author Bio
Jeff Howe is a contributing editor at Wired magazine, where he covers the entertainment industry among other subjects. He also writes the Desktop column at Print magazine, and writes a bi-monthly art column for Good magazine. Before coming to Wired he was a senior editor at Inside.com and a writer at the Village Voice. In his fifteen years as a journalist he has travelled around the world working on stories ranging from the impending water crisis in Central Asia to the implications of gene patenting. He has written for US News & World Report, the Washington Post, Mother Jones and numerous other publications. He lives in Brooklyn with his wife and daughter.