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The weekly poll has been closed. Here are the results.| Question: | ||
|---|---|---|
| Is crowdsourcing a real threat to the agency business? | ||
| Results: | ||
| Yes | 39% | |
| No | 61% | |
November 29, 2009
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| Question: | ||
|---|---|---|
| Is crowdsourcing a real threat to the agency business? | ||
| Results: | ||
| Yes | 39% | |
| No | 61% | |
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But questions like who has strategic oversight and what to do about spec can't be ignored.
At this point, crowdsourcing raises more questions that it solves, and it'll be interesting to see how new models like Victors & Spoils keeps the best and avoids the worst of the idea.
The inability to provide real answers to these questions is the mark of an industry in danger of devaluing itself out of business.
David Wiggs
Cheers/George
There are a couple of good books on the theory of crowds. Read them.
And then explain why they are a threat to agencies?
Are we that paranoid?
www.mindtracker.us
Clients may think it's a "cost-effective" option today, but the gradual loss of marketshare will be painful on the bottom line tomorrow.
I've seen a lot of bad uses of crowdsourcing in music. Bands are asked to submit music for a campaign, then the public is invited to vote. Often the band that wins isn't the best band, but was able to get more people to vote for them. And sometimes the winning music turns out to be a bad fit and isn't used for the campaign other than in a token way. The goal probably never was to find good music, but rather to get fans to look at the contest.
I haven't been impressed with some of the graphic designs that result from public contests.
If the agency or client does the choosing, then it becomes a matter of essentially opening up the submission process to a bigger pool of mini-agencies. Whether the result is better for the agencies, the creatives who submit, and the clients depends on how many good ideas come in and the time involved to sift through them.
So, in summary, I see crowdsourcing changing the landscape by generating more submissions, which will drive down price. Whether the end result is better than what agencies currently produce depends on many factors.
within a niche there is room for crowdsourced loyalty in product development--Dewmocracy--can work, if the correct demographic is heard.
Yes, the advertising and branding industry has a lot to fear from the demos. That's why most stable countries are republics.
Bring it on!
Mike Lauber
www.TuscoDisplay.com