Crowdsourcing: A viable approach for building your organization’s storytelling capacity?

man in crowd Crowdsourcing: A viable approach for building your organization’s storytelling capacity?In my post last week I talked about Cloud computing, and new ways organizations are using external service providers to address their computer application needs.  How does storytelling fit into that mix?  Given stories can be one of your organization’s most important knowledge assets, what new opportunity is “out there” for building your storytelling capacity?  “Crowdsourcing” may be that opportunity, if your data is accessible!

The problem:  Your organization’s story is going untold!

Some ways you can address the problem:

Crowdsourcing: Another approach for moving forward

Crowdsourcing is a distributed problem-solving and production model.  Your problem (i.e., too few stories) is broadcoast to an unknown group of solvers (i.e., potential story-tellers) in the form of an open call for solutions (i.e., stories).  These potential solvers (the online “crowd”) submit solutions.  Solutions are judged (there’s various models for doing this), with the organization (that broadcast the problem) taking ownership of the winning solution(s).  The concept of group intelligence is not new.  Crowdsourcing, the term, is.  Here in this  3 minute video, Jeff Howe (coiner of the term in 2006) provides his own summary:

The journey from information manager to storyteller

Here’s how I envision it, and crowdsourcing’s contribution…

  1. Identify your online information sources: videos, pictures, web links, reports, anecdotal, … (and with an eye to future information sources/insight, check out this Vimeo video about SONAR, an enterprise email analysis tool; thanks to Naumi Haque for this)
  2. Organize the information using “time” as an organizing principle; Dipity’s interactive timelines provide an interesting example on how to do this
  3. Engage the storytellers; make your information accessible (this is critical!) to the “crowd”; develop evaluation criteria and publicize the opportunity; the The District of Columbia’s Apps for America initiatives is a leading example of this approach
  4. Create the stories; solution providers (e.g., the artisans, craftspersons) provide their emotion-charged narrative and mashups to realize the magic of storytelling; for more about that MAGIC, read this great interview of Peter Guber, veteran films maestro (thanks to Margaret Harrison of the Our HR Company for bringing this to our attention on LinkedIn’s Corporate Story Telling discussion group)
  5. Share and learn; share the best stories (The Story of a Kiva.org Loan remains one of my favourite examples); interact with your audience; listen; learn

What this approach offers:

Some challenges with this approach:

Why do it?

Stories move us to action.  We need more good stories. I think crowdsourcing offers another way for organizations to develop those stories.  What do you think?

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Photo credit:  byrne7214

Related posts:

  1. Data visualization: Another good way to tell your organization’s story
  2. Building a collaborative project framework
  3. The power of a story told well
  4. Look to the “clouds” to satisfy your collaborative’s computing application needs
  5. Question Bank: A place to invest your organization’s important questions
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Comments

I liked this blog very much it gives me inspiration to do something more. This is a blog which is full of great knowledge and it is really a good work to share our knowledge with others. Great Job…

Thanks Cost of Assisted Living. I’m glad you’re enjoying the content of my blog. And it sounds like we’re both on the same page when it comes to the benefits of open knowledge sharing.

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