Open Minded Innovation: A Case Study on Crowdsourcing for Social Innovation
Abstract
This master’s thesis explores how crowdsourcing and, in particular, crowdsourcing contests
can be utilized for the advancement of social innovation. Crowdsourcing contests are growing
in popularity as a means for generating innovation across multiple sectors. They are being
more commonly used in the social sector to find breakthrough solutions for complex and
wicked problems faced by modern society. The utilization of the internet and web-based open
innovation platforms to host crowdsourcing contests enables collective problem solving and
solution development by inviting the participation of contributors from around the globe. In
this thesis study the Early Childhood Prize (EC Prize) has been investigated as a
representative case study to explore the phenomenon of utilizing crowdsourcing contests to
support social innovation. While the EC Prize focuses on advancing innovation within the
early childhood development field, this qualitative study aims to provide insight into this
emerging phenomenon as a whole by presenting scholarly literature in the subjects of social
innovation, open innovation, and crowdsourcing combined with empirical data gathered from
selected actors from the EC Prize. Key findings from the study are presented through three
primary areas of focus: tapping user innovation, facilitating the external search for innovation,
and collaboration with a distributed network to create social innovation. Additionally,
practical implications are presented along with suggestions for future research.
Degree
Master 2-years
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2020-07-22Author
Giove, Lee
Keywords
Open Innovation
Crowdsourcing
Crowdsourcing Contest
Crowdsourcing Prize
Social Innovation
Social Impact
Collective Intelligence
OpenIDEO
Early Childhood Development
Series/Report no.
Master Degree Project
2020:59
Language
eng