• On GameSpot: So-called 'Halo killer' gets 23 to life
November 2, 2009 9:52 PM PST

The world's first crowdsourced creative agency

by Tim Leberecht
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 2 comments
Share

It's always good to be the first, and while crowdsourcing, the trend, may have jumped the shark, a fully crowdsourced creative agency is a bold creative experiment and still news. Two Crispin Porter + Bogusky alums, John Winsor and Evan Fry, together with Claudia Batten, the founder of Microsoft-acquired video game advertising shop Massive, have launched Victors & Spoils (V&S), "the world's first creative agency built on crowdsourcing principle."

V&S says it will "provide businesses with a better way to solve their marketing, advertising and product-design problems by engaging the world's most talented creatives." The press release promises that "perceived crowdsourcing flaws will be addressed through world-class creative direction delivered through the use of the reputation-ranked Victors & Spoils crowd" but stays mum on how exactly the crowdsourced creative department will operate.

In any event, V & S is eating its own dog food. The first line you notice on its web site (after the humble "Welcome To Victors & Spoils. Let's Change An Industry") is "Why does this site look so plain, Jane?" and the answer is: because the site design, the look and feel, and even the logo are being crowdsourced.

Whether crowdsoucing yields better creative results, who knows? It certainly is a differentiator. V&S COO Claudia Batten twittered that she got calls from five Fortune 200 CMOs in the first five days since launch. We will follow this one closely.

Tim Leberecht is Frog Design's of vice president of marketing and communications. He has worked in the media, entertainment, and high-tech industries. Most recently, he was the head of corporate communications at Mindjet, a provider of mind-mapping software for the enterprise. Prior to Mindjet, he served as a press chief for the Athens 2004 International Olympic Torch Relay and in marketing communications for Deutsche Telekom in Germany. Tim runs the iPlot blog, and has published and spoken about branding, organizational communication, social media, and attention economics. Tim is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
Recent posts from Matter/Anti-Matter
Fiesta Movement--will it catch on?
Apple, Bloomberg: Two media brands in the social era
The psychology of healthcare reform
Mad Men finale: So you like being in advertising after all?
The world's first crowdsourced creative agency
Forrester: Adaptive branding and the new four P's of marketing
California artist rebuilds world economy with antimatter
Lessons for Nook from Zune
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by bradybone November 4, 2009 10:33 AM PST
This is not crowdsourcing - an overused and poorly misplaced term for what is spec work, pure and simple.

Based on what is being said, they will be the curators of the free work provided by anyone willing to participate and give up their rights to that work - again without any compensation. Read the contract, any submission is work-for-hire and you relinquish all rights to the work you submit.

In this era, where creativity is ?the new capital?, companies are trying to get at them fast, easy and cheap. Nothing new really, but what has surprisingly changed is that some people are more than willing to give that capital away.

- Brady Bone
Reply to this comment
by cristianc2v November 10, 2009 4:03 AM PST
The crowdsourcing debate seems to be ignoring a couple of points. 1) With the real time web, value can be created both from the process (engagement) and the final product (creative result). 2) Agencies seem to be once again missing the opportunity to embrace a new model in its early stages. More on this in a recent article on DigitalPopuli, would love your thoughts - http://digitalpopuli.com/crowdsourcing/whats-being-ignored-in-the-crowdsourcing-debate/
Reply to this comment
advertisement
Click Here

Google hopes to turn the river into a canal

Searching real-time services like Twitter at the moment is like standing in front of a firehose on a hot day: you'll get cooled off, but you'll get knocked over. Google wants to change that.

Will video site Vevo be next-gen MTV?

Vevo is the Web music-video service built by the big record labels with help from YouTube. Can it make an MTV-like splash?

About Matter/Anti-Matter

Tim Leberecht and Adam Richardson both work for Frog Design, a consulting firm specialized in designing innovative products and services for Fortune 500 clients. On the Matter / Anti-Matter blog, they engage in a debate around questions they face day-to-day in their work, using convergence/divergence as a lens through which to look at the pressing issues in business, culture, and technology. What makes a successful convergent product or a successful divergent innovation? Is convergence a myth that users don't really care about, or is the current state of convergence just not satisfying enough for them to embrace? How much divergence of innovation is good, and when does it just become confusing? How do you stay on top of people's ever changing needs and wants?

They are members of the CNET Blog Network and are not employees of CNET.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Matter/Anti-Matter topics

advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right