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Use ‘the wisdom of crowds’ at your work

August 12, 2009 By Allison ONeill

There is a great book called “The Wisdom of Crowds” by James Surowiecki. It basically says if you ask enough people a question you will end up with the correct answer.

If you ask just one or two people you’ll most likely get a wrong answer, but if you ask 20 people it will most likely be right. Ask 100 people and it’s even more likely to be right.

An example James uses in his book is when the Challenger blew up. It could have been the fault of a handful of companies and would take a while to figure out which one. After the accident many shares in the companies involved were sold. It turned out that the company that had the highest number of shares sold was the one who caused the problem! The wisdom of the shareholder crowd was right – they didn’t even need to wait to hear the official cause, the crowd knew.

4 things that make crowds wise
1. Diversity of opinion (private info, interpretation of known facts)
2. Independence (peoples opinions aren’t determined by those around them)
3. Decentralization (people are able to specialize and draw on local knowledge)
4. Aggregation (private judgments into collective decisions)

There was a test done to see if people care about ‘the wisdom of crowds’. They made one person stand on the corner of a busy street looking curiously up at the sky. Loads of people passed and nobody else looked up. They then got 10 people to stand there looking up and some passersby did look up. However when they made 50 people stand on the corner looking up everyone passing stopped to look up. The conclusion was the more people doing it the stronger the ‘social proof’ that something was happening – lots of people doing it means there must be a reason.

There were lots of other cool examples of the wisdom of crowds in the book such as to decide if you’ll need an umbrella check if everyone passing your house is carrying one, if not it probably wont rain – apparently this rarely fails. The same goes for moving your car off the street for cleaning in London – if others haven’t moved theirs it’s probably been cancelled this week.

So are businesses engaging the wisdom of crowds? Are they asking their staff loads of questions about things like new product innovations, marketing ideas, solutions to problems or customer relations? The answer is NO. Businesses still seem to be indifferent to the wisdom of crowds – they aren’t actively, constantly and frantically asking their employees anything! The staff surveying I did in the past convinced me of the power in the voice of the employee. But the wisdom of crowds goes even deeper than that. I highly recommend reading the book and figuring out exactly how to make it a way of life at your company – you will stand out a mile.

Allison ONeill

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Filed Under: Leadership, Management

Comments

  1. Cindy Morris says

    August 12, 2009 at 9:07 am

    An interesting thought, this wisdom of crowds. Surely I will have to check the book out because I am not so sure of the wisdom of crowds.
    When I think of crowds I think of sheep blindly following each other and the mob mentality, neither of which I would use to gauge any action on my part!
    I can see asking people their ideas and opinions, but ultimately I think it best to trust one’s own guidance and intuition. What might be good for others might NOT be so good for me!

    I feel it is more important to test reality than to follow the crowd.
    And if you follow history REALITY is not always what others experience it to be!

    Cindy Morris, msw
    Priestess Entrepreneur
    http://successpriestess.blogspot.com
    http://PracticalPriestess.com

  2. Allison O'Neill says

    August 12, 2009 at 3:39 pm

    Hi Cindy – yeah go for the book you’ll love it i’m sure 🙂

  3. Peg Rowe says

    August 17, 2009 at 12:49 pm

    Intersting…..I found myself in the question of “follow the crowd” or “wisdom of the crowd”. There may be a “both/and” vs “either/or”….will read the book to learn more.

    Thanks for sharing this book and it’s perspectives.

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