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Market Research Solutions Corinth MS

Asking the crowd for startup business help – using communities and groups of online individuals to test and market your business idea - may be the next hot trend in entrepreneurship in Corinth.

Central Payment
662-554-5169
320 County Road 518
Rienzi, MS
Copiah-Lincoln Community College SBDC
601-446-1254
11 Co-Lin Circle
Natchez, MS
Hinds Community College SBDC/ITC
601-857-3536
1500 Raymond Lake Road, 3rd FL.
Raymond, MS
Mississippi SBDC
662-915-5001
B-19 Jeanette Phillips Dr. P. O. Box 1848
University, MS
University of Mississippi SBDC
662-915-1291
B-19 Jeanette Phillips Dr.
University, MS
UMSBDC Business Assistance Center - NEMCC - Corinth
662-696-2311
2759 South Harper Road
Corinth, MS
Market Mix , Inc.
(601) 919-2669
534 Bradford Drive
Brandon, MS
Mississippi State University SBDC
662-325-8684
P.O. Drawer 5288 #1 Research Blvd., Suite 201
MS State, MS
Jackson State University SBDC
601-979-2795
1230 Raymond Road
Jackson, MS
Hinds SBDC Counseling Center
601-936-1817
3805 Highway 80E
Pearl, MS

Crowdsourcing - Starting a Business with a Cast of Thousands

You have a great idea for a startup but need research, development and innovation to make it happen. Stumped? Don’t be. Just ask the crowd.

With the Internet constantly making business easier and more accessible, the time is ripe. Crowdsourcing – the term was coined by Wired contributing editor Jeff Howe – happens when a company relies on outside volunteers and low-paid amateurs for ideas, direction, content, problem-solving and sometimes even product launch.

“It’s a model for the creation of intellectual property, although you also see it in the sciences,” Howe says.

Case in point: Cambrianhouse.com. Self-defined as “crowdsourced software,” Cambrian House’s mission is “to discover and commercialize software ideas through the wisdom and participation of crowds.” Contributors earn royalties.

Another good example: Lego Mindstorms NXT. The robotics toolset lets users build, program and personalize robots. Looking to develop a new version of Mindstorms, the company asked its “most enthusiastic users and consumers” to help develop the next product generation, says Michael McNally, brand relations director for Lego Systems, Inc.

The company’s always had an involved consumer base, McNally says. “We knew that the people who were still passionate Lego robotic hobbyists – spending hours per week – could best speak to the improvements we could make to reignite consumer excitement.

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