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Andy Green
57 High Street
Glen Ridge, NJ 07028
Email
T: 973-566-9265 |
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Tech Words
Informed
Technology Writing
Andy writes about
technology with intelligence and insight. He has written for B2B
publications, market research firms, and major software and
financial companies. Specializing in telecommunications, enterprise
software, security, and small-office technology. White papers.
Features. Software reviews. Corporate newsletters. Web copy.
Blogging. |
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For a corporate blog
Crowd Control: Crowdsourcing the Enterprise
Not everything can be automated. Sorry, it’s just not possible.
We expect contact center agents, not a software application , to
sort out a misplaced delivery order. There’s an interesting
computing trend called crowdsourcing that taps into the unique
skills of real people. Turning the human-versus-computer
relationship on its head, crowdsourcing uses software to organize
human problem solvers to take on tasks too difficult for silicon.
Think of it as an on-demand contact center that matches customers
with a virtual expert community.
In my last post, I mentioned that Amazon has developed a kind of
distributed contact center technology. Known as Mechanical Turk,
Amazon’s software allows companies to divvy up work among hundreds
of human agents (the crowd), collect the results, and return the
answers to an existing business workflow.
Amazon developed Mechanical Turk to solve its own internal,
CPU-thrashing task: finding and eliminating duplicate product
descriptions in its vast web site. Jeff Bezos, Amazon’s CEO, said
that existing Amazon software could algorithmically get very close
without being completely certain that it had identified a match.
With Mechanical Turk, a real person – not a software subroutine – is
called upon to close the gap.
In reality, a request for help, known as a Human Intelligence Task
or HIT, is posted on a web site. Humans do the analysis of the
multiple descriptions, entering their yes or no responses into a web
form that’s read by the software.
Mechanical Turk has obvious applications for audio transcription
services (legal industry), copy editing (publishing), debugging
(software), and photographic analysis. On that last point,
Mechanical Turk was used to help in the search for Steve Fosset’s
missing plane.
Amazon has made its software relatively easy to use. But businesses
that want to take the plunge and rely on anonymous workers — and
yes, they do get paid on a piecemeal basis to solve HITs —will have
to factor in practical challenges such as the qualifications and
skill-levels of these workers.
What about bringing this dynamic crowdsourcing idea into a company,
where the workforce is a known quantity, and letting employees take
on the role of the crowd? |
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