Publications

Download

Motivating Crowds to Do Good: How to Build Crowdsourcing Platforms for Social Innovation

Download
Suggested Citation

Kohler, T., & Chesbrough, H. (2020). Motivating Crowds to Do Good: How to Build Crowdsourcing Platforms for Social Innovation. NIM Marketing Intelligence Review, 12(1), 42-47. DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/nimmir-2020-0007

Year

2020

Authors
Thomas Kohler,
Henry Chesbrough
Publication title
Motivating Crowds to Do Good: How to Build Crowdsourcing Platforms for Social Innovation
Publication
NIM Marketing Intelligence Review
Download

Motivating Crowds to Do Good: How to Build Crowdsourcing Platforms for Social Innovation

Thomas Kohler and Henry Chesbrough 

Social innovations, just as any other form of innovation, can benefit from crowd engagement. However, the enthusiasm for crowdsourcing social innovation has so far run ahead of its effects. Many platforms are stillborn and struggle with turning their promising projects into sustaining platforms. As opposed to commercial crowd innovations projects, additional obstacles need to be handled here. Social innovation tends to be more complex and typically involves an entire ecosystem with complementary partners. In addition, funding is usually more difficult as the impact of doing good on a communal level is hard to assess and therefore difficult to explain to investors or sponsors. To make social innovation successful, the innovation platform design needs to tackle these additional challenges. The governance and coordination of social innovation projects need to be designed thoughtfully. Organizations need to be prepared for several loops and some experimentation to balance value generation with the right structure and the right mix of participants, consumers and other platform partners.  

Authors

  • Thomas Kohler, Director InnoSchool, InnoSchool, Dornbirn, Austria, thomas@innoschool.io
  • Henry Chesbrough, Faculty Director Garwood Center for Corporate Innovation, Hass School of Business, University of California, Berkeley, USA, chesbrou@haas.berkeley.edu
Share Publication

Other articles of the MIR issue “Crowd Innovation: Hype or Help?”

Here you can find more exciting articles of this issue.

To the entire issue

[Translate to English:]

Crowd-Innovation: The Philosopher´s Stone, a Silver Bullet, or Pandora’s Box?

Solutions to some of the most challenging problems have always come from people that are neither specialists nor experts in the focal field.

Read more
[Translate to English:]

How to Manage Crowdsourcing Platforms Effectively

Crowdsourced tasks are very diverse – and so are platform types. They fall into four categories, each demanding different governance …

Read more
[Translate to English:]

Strategies for Leveraging Crowds

Crowds can be very effective, but that is not always the case. To actually render the usage of crowds effective, several factors need to …

Read more
[Translate to English:]

How to Prevent Crowdsourcing Disasters and Leverage Positive Side Effects of Open Innovation

The gains from crowdsourcing can be high, but so can the risks. Contests may become a nightmare for the sponsoring …

Read more
[Translate to English:]

Open Strategy: The Inclusion of Crowds in Making Strategies

While innovation contests have become very popular, the inclusion of crowds in the strategy process is less common.

Read more

Crowdsourcing at NASA: About the Work Behind Having Others Do the Work

NASA’s record of innovations is truly awesome. Every child knows about the first man on the moon and the space shuttle program, or marvels …

Read more
[Translate to English:]

Case Study “Crowdsourcing@Rivella”: In Search of New Flavors

The development of new beverage concepts in close cooperation with consumers via crowdsourcing was a great success for Rivella AG overall, …

Read more
Scroll to top