Amsterdam: Wow. The Dutch know their crowdsourcing. I spoke yesterday to an audience of 350. I wanted to know who I was dealing with. I'm pretty accustomed to speaking to people who've never even heard of the term before. "Who's heard of Threadless.com?" I ask. Almost every hand goes up. That's okay, I figure, Threadless is an international sensation at this point. "Who's heard of InnoCentive?" Now I've got them. Outside of the sciences, almost no one I talk to has heard of InnoCentive. Two hundred hands shoot up. I was impressed, and a little intimidated. That said, the program was a smash, from my perspective anyway. The audience asked detailed, provocative questions and my hosts were gracious, witty and incredibly generous, treating me to a dinner both wonderful and wonderfully leisurely, in the proper European manner. But now I'm back, and so, I hope, are you. Below please find the continuation of Chapter Seven:
Marketocracy: Collective Intelligence Improvised
Think of TJ White as the argument for diversity, personified. In 1999 not many investors would have picked White as a candidate to manage their portfolios. Up to that point White had spent his life accumulating a lot of experience doing very little. He was an unremarkable student at his Midland, Texas high school. He signed up for an unremarkable six-year stint in the US Navy, followed by another six-year stint in Colorado pursuing what he calls his “second childhood,” working a series of jobs meant only to “support a lifestyle” that revolved around skiing and gold prospecting. He excelled at neither. One morning late that year White woke up, looked out at the parking lot outside his one-bedroom apartment and had a moment of clarity. “I was a loser. I was 30, and I had nothing. No skills, no college, no career.”
A few days after New Year’s Day 2000 White moved to Dallas, and the puzzle pieces started falling into place. He quickly found a job at a Home Depot not far from his house. “The manager was ex-Navy, and we hit it off,” White recalls. A few weeks after that he met the woman who would become his wife, at a get together of the Tall Texans of Dallas. “I stumbled across the Website when I first moved to Dallas,” explains White. “I’m six-foot-two, and Cheri’s six-foot-two. We got serious pretty quickly.”
Continue reading "Chapter 7-What the Crowd Knows: Collective Intelligence in Action, Cont." »

