Don Tapscott, Author of Wikinomics, says Business Leaders and
Policymakers Must Become "Radical Collaborators" - Just Like the
Thousands Who've Built Wikipedia, Facebook and YouTube
Business and Economic Growth are Slowed by Secretive Competition
and Proprietary Information - Opening the Curtain and Putting More
Minds to Work on the Problem Will Lead to Better Solutions and Faster
Recovery
TORONTO (Business Wire EON) March 26, 2008 --
The worldwide plunge into recession could be slowed, and the impact of
the recession made less severe, if business leaders and policymakers
stopped hoarding information and learned to share.
That’s the view of technology and
collaboration expert Don Tapscott, who believes that “radical
collaboration” – in
which business leaders open the curtains and share information that was
once proprietary – is the key to solving the
global financial crisis and restarting growth.
Tapscott is the author of Wikinomics, a book about mass
collaboration. Wikinomics has just been published in a new
edition with new material that comes to grips with the most serious
business and economic issues. According to Tapscott, collaboration can
transform business and global economics just as it has already
transformed the media industry and the social sphere through Wikipedia,
Facebook and YouTube.
“The old-school way of doing business hides
problems and creates inefficiencies,” says
Tapscott. “Radical collaboration solves those
problems. It brings the best minds together, exposes hidden risks, and
accelerates innovation and growth. We’ve seen
how it transforms industries, such as music and entertainment. But now it’s
time to take the same approach to the most serious problems –
problems with the gravest consequences for the economy and society.
Leaders need to change their habits and open the curtain.”
Tapscott is available to discuss:
-
How radical collaboration could have averted the subprime meltdown
and the global credit crunch. “The
subprime mess happened because big financial players hid the risks –
they weren’t found until it was too late.
If the same players had taken the radical step of sharing information
about the bets they were structuring, the best minds –
including economic policymakers – could
have seen what was happening and taken steps to avert it.”
-
Why collaboration drives growth and competition doesn’t.
“Innovation happens faster, new
products come to market faster, and performance improves when more
minds come together around the problem. Goldcorp became a dominant
player in the mining industry by making its proprietary geological
data public and challenging the outside world to do the prospecting.
It turned outsiders into collaborators and put its resources into
technologies to exploit the discoveries –
not the discoveries themselves. If Goldcorp had taken a traditional
competitive approach and hidden its data, it would never have been
able to grow so quickly.”
-
Why innovation happens faster and big problems get solved through
open collaboration. “The software
industry knows the value of open-source software development, where
the code is made public so that anyone can work on it and improve it.
The result is better software with fewer bugs. That approach shouldn’t
be confined to software development. Most companies that hold patents
would do better to share them, because by themselves they don’t
have the resources to bring them to market. And collaboration can
accelerate big solutions to big problems. Novartis published
its raw research data about Type 2 Diabetes because it recognized that
the problem was very big and very important –
so big and so important that it needed more brains and more resources
than the company had under its roof.”
“Business leaders will have a hard time
collaborating because collaboration goes against all their instincts,”
Tapscott says. “But there’s
ample proof that leaders who take the radical step of collaboration and
data-sharing do better. They avoid risks, grow faster and dominate
markets.”
Mr. Tapscott is available to discuss these and other points about
collaboration and the current economic crisis. For more
information, to schedule an interview or for a copy of the new edition
of Wikinomics, contact Alexandra
Corriveau of Sommerfield Communications at (212) 255-8386 or alexandra@sommerfield.com.
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