Crowdsourcing: Global Search and the Twisted Roles of Consumers and Producers

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Crowdsourcing spreads and morphs quickly, shaping areas as diverse as creating, organizing, and sharing knowledge; producing digital artifacts; providing services involving tangible assets; or monitoring and evaluating. Crowdsourcing as sourcing by means of ‘global search’ yields four types of values for sourcing actors: creative expertise, critical items, execution capacity, and bargaining power. It accesses cheap excess capacities at the work realm’s margins, channeling them toward production. Provision and utilization of excess capacities rationalize society while intimately connecting to a broader societal trend twisting consumers’ and producers’ roles: leading toward ‘working consumers’ and ‘consuming producers’ and shifting power toward the latter. Similarly, marketers using crowdsourcing’s look and feel to camouflage traditional approaches to bringing consumers under control preserve producer power.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)661-681
Number of pages21
JournalOrganization
Volume22
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2015

Fields of science

  • 502 Economics
  • 502014 Innovation research
  • 502015 Innovation management
  • 506009 Organisation theory

JKU Focus areas

  • Management and Innovation

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