There is a somewhat popular marketing concept known as communities of consumption originally inspired by Marshall McLuhan. As I am reading through the various blogs and comments, I'm thinking about the more interesting concept of communities of production, networks of creative individuals working together to produce value. This is of course Wikipedia and all its offshoots, and this is the basic goal of this course. The goal of most classes is, and will remain, learning. However, the nature of that learning has changed over time. The old concept of the Professor essentially creating obstacles in the form of assignments and tests that the student must overcome in order to earn a grade is inefficient. There is no reason that the work done by the Professor and the students shouldn't have inherent value that extends beyond the classroom. Furthermore, there is no reason not to take advantage of the fact that we have gathered all these intelligent individuals with diverse backgrounds together.
It is interesting (at least to me) that as I think about how to leverage this course to create value I find that the ideas that arise might be resisted by members of the class. For example, as I move through the various blogs I find it difficult to adjust to the different formats the students have chosen. For anyone attempting to leverage this "blog cluster" it would be much easier if all blogs used the same template. This is marketing 101 - simplicity and consistency of "look and feel" enhances learning and memorability. But how many of you would consider a rule limiting your template choice as a constraint on your creative expression? In for-profit marketing we are all willing to "toe the line" in service of our profit objective - hence all Apple ads look essentially the same. But somehow as we move to the social marketing work restrictions on creativity become sacrosanct. And this makes us less efficient, and ultimately less effective as a community of production. Just a thought...
Zooming In
15 years ago