Thursday, June 30, 2011

A Mypitch home run and a fresh cup of Zoopa!

Check out what the creative crowd came up with on some rather challenging briefs from Osborne Vineyards, and The Week (through the crowdsource platforms MyPitch and Zoopa, respectively)


Would you let a focus group design your ad campaign?

Of course not, but you would listen to them. With at least one ear open. Too many opinions will eventually make any idea impotent. Collaborative discussion on CS platforms don’t really seem to actually improve ideas. It’s hard enough taking real direction from some one you trust and have an analog relationship with. The comment forums are often reduced to a saccharine litany of “cool” “thanks” and “nice idea” and the usual thumbs up icon.

I think there are some  fascinating insights to be gleaned from even the most obscure solution offered. (note: the most obvious problem the novice open crowd has, is misunderstanding the nature of the brief or the “ask”)  This would be a great tool for ad agencies when they’re designing the brief – if there was a way to keep proprietary information hidden form the open crowd. (competitors lurk there!) Running mock contests (with full disclosure and real prizes) might be a way around the sensitive information issue. And I actually believe some brands who offer briefs on crowdsource platforms, knowingly omit pertinent data to protect the brand. A bit of handicap for the community trying to create a viable solution for them!

Who does the crowd really work for? (more thoughts on what drives the crowd)

Note: in virtually ever case my posts refer to The open crowd on CS platforms that invite innovation, visual content, advertising and design solutions.






The open crowd - free range crowd? - is populated essentially by non-experts. And in that sense you'd think an expert in the crowd could clean up and win contest after contest. (If you're an expert playing in the crowd let me know about your experiences!)

I've witnessed many winning solutions that are clearly off-brief. (And heavily dissed in the forums by livid community members) The winning solution providers are earnest and sincere in their efforts and often show some extraordinary creativity. Getting off-brief is easy. That's were crowd managers and brand keepers should be stepping up. Hard to do with 1500+ crowd members. We still have account execs and creative directors in the trad agencies that struggle with the task too. And the less precise the brief the harder the task,

Filling all the media channels available to any brand with new content via a regular agency would be cost-prohibitive.

So here come the crowds.
But many of the Cs's vids for brands are painful to watch, proving only how hard it is to actually create and tell a good story in 30 seconds. But the crowds still come and the brand still buys the stuff.

I would suggest that apart from participating in the contest, and reading the brief, no crowd members actually care that much about the brand. How can they? They relationship is not consumer-brand

What drives the crowd?

There seems to be a lot of optimism from crowd leaders and CS platforms suggesting that “brand love” is the motive force behind the crowd. If I drive a VW and I have a predilection for creative expression, then I’ll jump on the chance to participate in a contest that is led by VW. That may indeed describe a very small percentage of the crowd. And it may be especially true for the random, occasional housewife participant, but for the expert crowd or even the enthusiastic novices, human nature would suggest otherwise.

It’s not about the brand, it’s about the contest.

It’s about the size of the prize and most importantly it’s about the the quality of the brief. If the brief is convoluted, overly complex, unclear or just too broad you lose the crowd. Why participate when don’t have a clear idea of what the client is looking for. Even if it’s a “one off” everyone wants to win. Brands who try to determine what they want AFTER they see the 300 solutions is a good way to lose the crowd.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Discover eYeka...

Another crowdsourced community of creative solution providers: some big brands here with some meaty challenges and no logo design projects, thankfully. ( There are plenty of fine CS platforms for that end of the design spectrum).

What is the future of digital scents?

Sunday, June 26, 2011

The bigger the brand the bigger the crowd?

Not always. I've witnessed thousands of entries for a non-existent "brand". I've seen almost 7,000 solution on one simple, but difficult brief. What gets so many people interested in participating? (I written on this topic before, and will continue to. It's worthy of more discussion I think). It's about the quality of the contest: is it inherently interesting; the prize; and if you're an "expert" how much down-time you have on your hands!

The crowd is not homogenous of course. Nor are the results. In fact, of the thousands of solutions in one particular contest ( I'll let you find it on your own!) I would suggest that over 50% are the same, or just variations on a theme. In this pool of creative there appear to be few experts and of the more professional solutions there are only a dozen or so that have real merit and are positioned thoughtfully with believable rationales.

All the same or different.

Experts and novices in the same crowd will give a wide ranges of solutions. If the contest is blind, there will be must less repetition. It's not that individuals will plagiarize on purpose, but sometimes seeing other solutions that they've actually thought about on their own tends to make people want to post it anyway. First come, first serve. Time stamps help. Traditionally, in an ad agency setting in the creative department, if you have a good idea it's best to blurt it out first!




Friday, June 24, 2011

Does individual ego and competitiveness drive innovation or does collaboration?


The Wisdom of the crowds
At first take, this sounds counter intuitive, if you think about it in the more traditional “crowd psychology/mentality” sense. It usually brings to mind destructive behaviour like looting or throwing around tomatoes or running with bulls…But are creative solutions more likely to develop when the crowd runs free? The idea of cross-pollination and the community building on each other’s ideas assumes that the ego of the individual is subservient to the crowd, that better ideas than yours are automatically seized upon and celebrated. Bear in mind I'm talking upon uncurated CS platforms.They may be experts or novices weighing in on your ideas. The more “likes” the more thumb’s up the better the idea? That’s possible. But I think common desires and preferences only maintain the status quo and do not disrupt it. If Innovation and big ideas lie somewhere in the disruption of the usual order of things, sharing, discussion, cross-pollination starts to fight against true innovation. Big, creative disruptive ideas can intimidate people. That’s a natural reaction. The crowd may in fact harbor big ideas, but in the light of public forums and galleries, they may not survive.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Respect your crowd.

Is a crowdworkers union the next thing?

They work tirelessly. They compete with hundreds of others. They're often never compensated, but hopefully learn and have fun working on some challenging briefs under tight deadlines. So keep the blogs and forums current. Have your clients reward the winners as quickly as possible and most importantly show the winning solution and tell them why it won.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

300 vs 4


By definition, crowdsource platforms deal in numbers. Big numbers. Offering clients hundreds if not thousands of solutions for any given brief! Really! (Check out over 6000 logos and counting here - again I'm using the global initiative to find a symbol to represent "Human Rights Protection and Promotion" as an extreme example.)

Is it even possible to have more than a half dozen real, actionable ideas for any given brief? I suppose it depends on the brief's objective: is it a product innovation, YouTube vid content, logo, print ad?...etc. As an old school creative developer who stills works with writers and account people to solve creative briefs, we rarely come up with more than a dozen directions and very rarely present more than 3 to client. Peer review and even formal focus groups are very much part of that process too.

Choosing the right idea amongst several is a skill in itself. That's how creative directors do their job. How do you do it right when the numbers get so big? The danger is moving off brief towards something that may be very cool, but not the right thing to do for the brand.

What drives the crowd?

There seems to be a lot of optimism from crowd leaders and CS platforms suggesting that “brand love” is the motive force behind the crowd. If I drive a VW and I have a predilection for creative expression, then I’ll jump on the chance to participate in a contest that is led by VW. That may indeed describe a very small percentage of the crowd. And it may be especially true for the random, occasional housewife participant, but for the expert crowd or even the enthusiastic novices, human nature would suggest otherwise.

It’s not about the brand, it’s about the contest.

It’s about the size of the prize and most importantly it’s about the the quality of the brief. If the brief is convoluted, overly complex, unclear or just too broad you lose the crowd. Why participate when don’t have a clear idea of what the client is looking for. Even if it’s a “one off” everyone wants to win. Brands who try to determine what they want AFTER they see the 300 solutions is a good way to lose the crowd.

As a crowdsource company watcher and participant, it’s interesting to watch some clients change requirements mid-contest, just like they do in non-crowdsourced environments!

Sunday, June 12, 2011

How to win a design contest.




















Note: the task was to apply graphics to the existing trophy sculpture - it was presented to the crowd as a blank canvas.

I was trying to tell a story of community and "sharing" the win with my design concept. In light of what actually won, my approach was a little too pedestrian and predicable. So how do you win? Zig, when the crowd zags!

Chi Fong Leong, went beyond the typical boundaries of graphic design. He did not just apply graphics, he "implied emotion" with heat sensitive paint. (When anyone touches the trophy it retains their hand print for several minutes.) I would never have thought of it, and that's actually very exciting to me. In fact I've now learned something about my own creative process! Check out his out his cool work - here.

Roles for the creative community managers on crowdsourced platforms

(This is not a complete list of course. I've complied some of these thoughts based on personal experiences with un-curated crowdsourced sites calling for creative solutions to marketing and advertising challenges.)

Insight Mining:

-In depth review of all solutions: Looking past the execution to discover the creators true intention and how that might inform the client and provide real insight to their brand.

Crowd Control:

-Active role in maintenance of the forums: leading discussions, making requests and offering general guidance.

Feedback Generation:

-Assessing solutions based on client brief: This may come down to a simple checklist that both creators and community managers can see and use, before and during the development process.

Creative referee:

-Above and beyond offering feedback, the community manager must determine what solutions may have been compromised by other creators or may not be the sole intellectual property of the creator who offered the solution. Even if the contest is hidden or “blind” it would be valuable both the creator and client to restrict some solutions for upload until certain conditions are met.



Sunday, June 5, 2011

Ideas without borders.


Thoughts on “human rights logo” crowdsourced project: post 1

We’re all tired of the “thinking outside the box” analogy. Besides being over used, it’s not actually a fair description of a successful thought process that leads to real, actionable ideas. You have to be able to think inside the box first. And by that I mean, address the problem/challenge head on and understand how a straight forward solution works in the first place. It’s just the first step. It won’t yield the sexiest solution nor the final one but it helps define the “box” which you’ll need to step out of eventually.

As of this date there are over 4000 logo ideas on the Human rights logo. Truly, ideas without borders, but also so many ideas that seem to ignore some fundamental questions about the purpose of the logo challenge. Adhering to graphic Design principles aren’t really important on this platform; it’s about pure ideas and iconography that transcend language. After perusing the solutions it becomes obvious how difficult this project really is. Trying to get lateral and avoid the clichés is a tremendous challenge. The predominate imagery is globe, stick figure human, equal sign and surprisingly the words “human rights” in English.

The first "in-the-box" question needs to be answered. What does it mean to be Human? It’s a tough question really, but the answer should point the way to a possible solution. (Full disclosure: I have posted an icon that tries to answer that question too.)

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Looking for insights within the cognitive debris


100 brains on the same brief. How many solutions would be identical or similar? If you gave the brief to a selective crowd ( vetted professionals in a particular field) with the same cultural backgrounds. My guess: at least 50. The number would get smaller the less “selective” the crowd gets: choosing different participants from different disciplines. The problem is that you’ll get more cognitive debris: more ideas off brief and some just plainly off kilter. It’s unfair to expect a novice or the uninitiated to think like a professional in any particular field. But we’re free to ask and it’s free to participate. That’s one of the beautiful things about crowdsourcing.

Brilliant ideas may still be in the novice crowds. You just have to look harder. I’ll call this “insight mining” for now….