Focus groups are out. Crowdsourcing is in.
Those who make a living on the bleeding edge are proposing Web 2.0 social networking technologies as replacements for focus groups.
Today's oft recommended solution-du-juor, crowdsourcing, is defined as, "the use of people and companies to help other people and companies for compensation," according to Paul Poutanen, president of crowdsourcing firm, Mob4hire.
That doesn't sound so different from focus groups.
But wait, they say. Unlike focus groups, crowdsourcing is inexpensive, unbiased, fast and reliable...because large numbers of customers are collaborating in the innovation process right there with you, in real time.
With crowdsourcing, they say, all you have to do is define a problem for the crowd to solve, find customers who care and who can solve the problem, invite them and compensate them for their contributions. Companies need only facilitate the collaboration process and discern which of their many ideas the company should implement.
That's unlike focus groups, where you have to define the problem, find qualified customers, compensate them, facilitate the process and figure out which of their ideas to implement.
See the difference???
Neither did I.
The fact is that both crowd sourcing and focus groups have their place. Choosing requires exercising judgement in defining the problem to be solved and in how each tool is most usefully applied. The chooser must be able describe why one tool was chosen over another in way that is informed, transparent, and imbues decision makers with confidence.
I'll write more in upcoming posts about situations in which crowdsourcing, focus groups and other tools are optimally used.
In the meantime, remember that information technologies are only tools. They render value measured by the skill of the hands using them.
--Jason M. Sherman
Jason M. Sherman is president of Whyze Group. The company uses crowdsourcing, focus groups and other tools on behalf of Fortune 500 companies that are learning how to innovate their customer experiences.
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