By Avi Rosenthal | Article Rating: |
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March 26, 2013 05:13 PM EDT | Reads: |
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The "confederated" answers to some of the line similarity tasks were wrong and identical. 75% of the participants conformed with wrong "confederated" answers.
We should expect higher conformity in case of more difficult questions.
As far as Wisdom of the Crowd is concerned, expect identical answers in similar situations, i.e. Social Interactions between people answering the question.
Factor 1: Information Technology example
More than a decade ago, an Insurance Company's CIO presented in a local IT conference. The CIO was brave: He publicly admitted a colossal failure of selecting and implementing a strategic Software product.
He admitted a waste of hundred thousands of USDs and few years due to this mistake.
He was not the only one to commit this mistake: many others made the same mistake and get similar results. The only difference was that other CIOs did not admit their failure.
About half of Israeli Enterprises chose this software product. The CIO said: "We failed same as everybody in the Israeli IT".
A thought flashed in my mind: Should I scream not everybody? My clients, who followed my recommendations, did not fail. They did not chose that software product.
The Software Product was an excellent product for small systems, but not applicable to Large complicated CRUD systems with hundreds or thousands users.
By design, it was not Scalable.
The process of the product assimilation is a long process: studying, building a Pilot, experimenting and building simple applications. Only afterwards CRUD type applications were developed.
Usage of these CRUD applications was gradual i.e. in the beginning the application was implemented with limited number of users.
Only those who deployed CRUD applications with hundreds of users experienced the consequences of the Scalability limitations.
Those who failed used a kind of Wisdom of the Crowd. They asked for their colleagues opinion. They received positive feedback because their colleages' implementations were still in early stages therefore they chose this Strategic Product.
My approach was different: I read Analyst's Research Notes and discovered the inherent Scalability limitations. I also looked for feedback from USA Early Adopters.
As expected, all early Adopters failed in implementing large scale applications.
It was easy to recommend to consider other alternatives.
Factor 2: Unique Characteristics
Wisdom of the Crowd approach data, will support a wrong intuitive solution pointed by most people surveyed.
Factor 2: The Monty Hall Dilemma
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The Monty Hall Problem. Source: Wikipedia |
most of the votes, using Wisdom of the Crowd, will assign equal probabilities to a car behind the first and a car behind the third door. These votes support wrong decision.
Factor 2: Information Technology example
This example is also old one: more than a decade ago.
A client (An Enterprise) asked me to help him in choosing an Operating System, for migrating or developing his most crucial application.
I have to recommend UNIX or proprietary Operating System.
As in most cases, there were constraints.
The following constraints were applicable to this task:
1. Short Time for implementing the application -Completing the System development beyond the schedule was impossible.
2. The vendor which should provide the Server and Operating System was predefined.
3. I had to finish the task in two days.
In addition, an ongoing process of choosing the Strategic Operating system was not completed. I was the leading advocate of UNIX. Others support proprietary Operating Systems.
Factor 2: Information Technology example Recommendation
When I discussed the issue with the vendor's experts and read the vendor's papers, I discovered that most (not to say all), users world wide facing the same decision selected UNIX.
There were hundreds of Enterprises which preferred UNIX. No evidence of enterprises choosing the proprietary Operating System was available.
It was easy for me to conform to the Wisdom of the Crowd and chose UNIX. Choosing UNIX, would also support the UNIX agenda, I advocated for the enterprise.
I recommended usage of the proprietary Operating System.
My paper included the evidence that most of the other Enterprises selected UNIX.
It also describe the uniqueness of my client's enterprise supporting selection of the proprietary Operating System.
Factor 2: Information Technology example unique characteristics
The unique characteristics were limited UNIX knowledge and experience, as well as a lot of knowledge and experience in the proprietary environment. Coupling the knowledge (propriety) and the lack of knowledge (UNIX) with the System importance and schedule constraint, will result in high Risk UNIX implementation.
The risk of deploying the application after schedule, in a relatively good scenario, and of failing to deploy it appropriately, in a less optimistic scenario, supported non-UNIX implementation recommendation.
Summary
It is easy to find other examples in Information Technology, as well as in other fields (as I did in my Hebrew post) in which usage of Wisdom of the Crowd could cause wrong decisions.
You can not count on the crowd, when there is strong Social Conformity.
If their are Unique characteristics, the crowd may ignore them and will recommend a wrong decision.
Even if you ask many people and few of them will perceive the uniqueness and recommend the right solution, the Wisdom of the Crowd data gatherer could reach a wrong conclusion, by preferring the majority opinion.
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Published March 26, 2013 Reads 533
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More Stories By Avi Rosenthal
Ari has over 30 years of experience in IT across a wide variety of technology platforms, including application development, technology selection, application and infrastructure strategies, system design, middleware and transaction management technologies and security.
Positions held include CTO for one of the largest software houses in Israel as well as the CTO position for one of the largest ministries of the Israeli government.
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