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Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations Hardcover – February 28, 2008
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- Print length336 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPenguin Press
- Publication dateFebruary 28, 2008
- Reading age18 years and up
- Dimensions5.84 x 1.14 x 8.56 inches
- ISBN-109781594201530
- ISBN-13978-1594201530
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From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Human beings are social creatures—not occasionally or by accident but always. Sociability is one of our lives as both cause and effect. Society is not just the product of its individual members; it is also the product of its constituent groups. The aggregate relations among individuals and groups, among individuals within groups, and among groups forms a network of astonishing complexity. We have always relied on group effort for survival; even before the invention of agriculture, hunting and gathering required coordinate work and division of labor. You can see an echo of our talent for sociability in the language we have for groups; like a real-world version of the mythical seventeen Eskimo words for snow, we use incredibly rich language in describing human association. We can make refined distinctions between a corporation and a congregation, a clique and a club, a crowd and a cabal. We readily understand the difference between transitive labels like "my wife's friend's son" and "my son's friend's wife, " and this relational subtlety permeates our lives. Our social nature even shows up in a negation. One of the most severe punishments that can be meted out to a prisoner is solitary confinement; even in a social environment as harsh and attenuated as prison, complete removal from human contract is harsher still.
Our social life is literally primal, in the sense that chimpanzees and gorillas, our closest relatives among the primates, are also social. (Indeed, among people who design software for group use, human social instincts are sometimes jokingly referred to as the monkey mind.) But humans go further than any of our primate cousins: our groups are larger, more complex, more ordered, and longer lived, and critically, they extend beyond family ties to include categories like friends, neighbors, colleagues, and sometimes even strangers. Our social abilities are also accompanied by high individual intelligence. Even cults, the high-water mark of surrender of individuality to a group, can't hold a candle to a beehive in terms of absolute social integration; this makes us different from creatures whose sociability is more enveloping than ours.
This combination of personal smarts and social intuition makes us the undisputed champions of the animal kingdom in flexibility of collective membership. We act in concert everywhere, from simple tasks like organizing a birthday party 9itself a surprisingly complicated task) to running an organization with thousands or even millions of members. This skill allows groups to tackle tasks that are bigger, more complex, more dispersed, and of longer duration than any person could tackle alone. Building an airplane or a cathedral, performing a symphony or heart surgery, raising a barn or razing a fortress, all require the distribution, specialization, and coordination of many tasks among many individuals, sometimes unfolding over years or decades and sometimes spanning continents.
We are so natively good at group effort that we often factor groups out of our thinking about the world. Many jobs that we regard as the province of a single mind actually require a crowd. Michelangelo had assistants paint part of the Sistine Chapel ceiling. Thomas Edison, who had over a thousand patents in his name, managed a staff or two dozen. Even writing a book, a famously solitary pursuit, involves the work of editors, publishers, and designers; getting this particular book into your hands involved additional coordination among printers, warehouse managers, truck drivers, and a host of others in the network between me and you. Even if we exclude groups that are just labels for shared characteristics (tall people, redheads), almost everyone belongs to multiple groups based on family, friends, work, religious affiliation, on and on. The centrality of group effort to human life means that anything that changes the way groups function will have profound ramifications for everything from commerce and government to media and religion.
One obvious lesson is that new technology enables new kinds of group-forming. The tools Evan Guttman availed himself of were quite simple—the phone itself, e-mail, a webpage, a discussion forum—but without them the phone would have stayed lost. Every step of the way he was able to escape the usual limitations of private life and to avail himself of capabilities from various professional classes to the general public is epochal, built on what the publisher Tim O'Reilly calls 'an architecture of participation."
When we change the way we communicate, we change society. The tools that a society uses to create and maintain itself are as central to human life as a hive is to bee life. Though the hive is not part of any individual bee, it is part of the colony, both shaped by and shaping the lives of its inhabitants. The hive is a social device, a piece of bee information technology that provides a platform, literally, for the communication and coordination that keeps the colony or from their shared, co-created environment. So it is with human networks; bee hives, we make mobile phones.
But mere tools aren't enough. The tools are simply a way of channeling existing motivation. Evan was driven, resourceful, and unfortunately for Sasha, very angry. Had he presented his mission in completely self-interested terms ("Help my friend save 4300!") or in unattainably general ones ("Let's fight theft everywhere!"), the tools he chose wouldn't have mattered. What he did was to work out a message framed in big enough terms to inspire interest, yet achievable enough to inspire confidence. (This sweet spot is what Eric Raymond, the theorist of open source software, calls "a plausible promise.") Without a plausible promise, all the technology in the world would be nothing more than all the technology in the world.
As we saw in the saga of the lost Sidekick, getting the free and ready participation of a large, distributed group with a variety of skills—detective work, legal advice, insider information from the police to the army—has gone from impossible to simple. There are many small reasons for this, both technological and social, but they all add up to one big change; forming groups has gotten a lot easier. To put it in economic terms, the costs incurred by creating a new group or joining an existing one have fallen in recent years, and not just by a little bit. They have collapsed. ("Cost" here is used in the economist's sense of anything expended—money, but also time, effort, or attention.) One of the few uncontentious tenets of economics is that people respond to incentives. If you give them more of a reason to do something, they will do more of it, and if you make it easier to do more of something they are already inclined to do, they will also do more of it.
Why do the economics matter, though? In theory, since humans have a gift for mutually beneficial cooperation, we should be able to assemble as needed to take on tasks too big for one person. If this were true, anything that required shared effort—whether policing, road construction, or garbage collection—would simply arise out of the motivations of the individual members. In practice, the difficulties of coordination prevent that from happening. (Why this is so is the subject of the next chapter.)
But there are large groups. Microsoft, the U.S. Army, and the catholic Church are all huge, functioning institutions. The difference between an ad hoc group and a company like Microsoft is management. Rather than waiting for a group to self-assemble to create software, Microsoft manages the labor of its employees. The employees trade freedom for a paycheck, and Microsoft takes the cost of directing and monitoring their output. In addition to the payroll, it pays for everything from communicating between senior management and the workers (one of the raisons d'etre for middle management) to staffing the human resources department to buying desks and chairs. Why does Microsoft, or indeed any institution, tolerate these costs?
They tolerate them because they have to; the alternative is institutional collapse. If you want to organize the work of even dozens of individuals, you have to manage them. As organizations grow into the hundreds or thousands, you also have to manage the managers, and eventually to manage the managers' managers. Simply to exist at that size, an organization has to take on the costs of all that management. Organizations have many ways to offset those costs—Microsoft uses revenues, the army uses taxes, the church uses donations—but they cannot avoid them. In a way, every institution lives in a kind of contradiction: it exists to take advantage of group effort, but some of its resources are drained away by directing that effort. Call this the institutional dilemma—because an institution expends resources to manage resources, there is a gap between what those institutions are capable of in theory and in practice, and the larger the institution, the greater those costs.
Here's where our native talent for group action meets our new tools. Tools that provide simple ways of creating groups lead to new groups, lots of new groups, and not just more groups but more kinds of groups. We've already seen this effect in the tools that Evan used—a webpage for communicating with the world, instant messages and e-mails by the thousands among his readers, and the phone itself, increasingly capable of sending messages and pictures to groups of people, not just to a single recipient (the historical pattern of phone use).
If we're so good at social life and shared effort, what advantages are these tools creating? A revolution in human affairs is a pretty grandiose thing to attribute to a ragtag bunch of tools like email and mobile phones. E-mail is nice, but how big a deal can it be in the grand schem...
Product details
- ASIN : 1594201536
- Publisher : Penguin Press (February 28, 2008)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9781594201530
- ISBN-13 : 978-1594201530
- Reading age : 18 years and up
- Item Weight : 1 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.84 x 1.14 x 8.56 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,889,933 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,600 in Telecommunications & Sensors
- #14,200 in Business Management (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Clay Shirky teaches at the Interactive Telecommunications Program at New York University, where he researches the interrelated effects of our social and technological networks. He has consulted with a variety of groups working on network design, including Nokia, the BBC, Newscorp, Microsoft, BP, Global Business Network, the Library of Congress, the U.S. Navy, the Libyan government, and Lego(r). His writings have appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Times (of London), Harvard Business Review, Business 2.0, and Wired.
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Customers find the book thought-provoking and informative. They describe it as an interesting read that entertains both computer professionals and non-computer people. The opening story hooks readers with its intriguing quality.
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Customers find the book informative and stimulating. They say it's the best for understanding the big societal changes the Internet brings. The book provides interesting discussions with facts and figures, as well as anecdotes. It has a rich collection of well-documented case studies illustrating the effects.
"...He hints at this with his most recent book, Cognitive Surplus, which envisions could happen if people stopped watching mind-numbing TV and started..." Read more
"...easily read many summations of particular ideas, cull the best advice from these diverse sources, and combine them in powerful and innovative ways...." Read more
"...He discusses multiple historic examples, for example how McCallum have thought of an org chart when he was working at New York & Erie Railroad...." Read more
"...and instant messaging, and this is by far the one which does the deepest thinking...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and informative. They say it's a good read for both IT professionals and non-computer people. The author presents a compelling case for the future possibilities of the fabric in a way that is valuable to a wide range of readers. Readers mention they have a favorite passage from the book.
"...Here Comes Everybody is a remarkable book...." Read more
"...transformation of our social fabric in a way that is valuable to a wide range of readers...." Read more
"...written, with lots of examples, thought provoking, this book will entertain IT professionals and non-computer people alike...." Read more
"...helpful to this reviewer was the chapter on having a plausible promise, an effective tool, and an acceptable bargain as a way to engage users...." Read more
Customers find the book's story engaging. They appreciate the opening story about how the Internet enabled a woman to connect with others. However, some readers feel the book lacks substance after reading other books.
"The book begins with an intriguing story of a girl who found a cellphone that was forgotten in a cab and later refused to return it to the owner...." Read more
"Hooked by the wonderful opening story of how the Internet enabled a woman to recover her lost-or-stolen mobile phone, I was fascinated by the many..." Read more
"An ok starting point but once you read other books with more substance and details, you'll find Shirky's conclusions too general." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2011The subtitle of this book is "Revolution doesn't happen when society adopts new technology, it happens when society adopts new behaviors." Nice tag line, and a good entry point into this penetrating examination of how the Internet and Social Media are transforming the world we live in. Shirky covers complex content with humility, humanity and skill.
Here Comes Everybody is a remarkable book. Shirky states that the Internet is the biggest disruptive force since the telephone, television, transistor and the birth control pill combined. I've heard others say the printing press, and a blog I read recently compared the Internet to the invention of alphabet. In any event, it's a watershed event.
In this book's well-edited pages Shirky says, "Philosophers sometimes make a distinction between difference in degree (more of the same) and difference in kind (something new)." Social Media and the Internet represent something new. He adds, "When society is changing, we want to know whether the change is good or bad, but that kind of judgment becomes meaningless with transformations this large."
Central to this book is Coase's theorem. Coase won a Nobel Prize studying the economic factors of production inside of firms, a radical departure from traditional macroeconomic focus. Coase looked at transaction costs within and between firms (Contracting, Cooperating, Control) as a key unit of economic study. What he found is that three transaction activities have historically required significant cost and energy:
1. Sharing
2. Cooperation
3. Collective Action
The Internet makes these activities much less expensive. Shirky sees the cost of sharing plummeting to zero, creating bargains for shoppers, and new challenges and opportunities for business. The Internet is also reducing the cost of categorization, digital reproduction and distribution. All of this is creating significant disruption for newspapers, advertisers, the post office, encyclopedias, the music industry, etc.
Shirky also sees disruption for attorneys, doctors, journalists, consultants and management professionals because of the readily available knowledge on the Internet. He says, "Professional self-conception and self-defense, so valuable in ordinary times, become a disadvantage in revolutionary ones, because professionals are always concerned with threats to the profession." And further, "Novices make mistakes from a lack of experience. They overestimate user fads, see revolution everywhere, and they make this kind of error a thousand times before they learn better. In times of revolution, though, the experienced among us make the opposite mistake. When a real, once-in-a-lifetime change comes along, we are at risk of regarding it as a fad"
Shirky sees cooperation as more difficult than sharing because it requires behavior synchronization -- and collective action harder still because it requires the commitment to the group and group governance, "or, put another way, rules for losing." He states that as a group grows arithmetically the complexity grows logarithmically. More people, more potential problems.
One potential solution to cooperation is shared awareness. He states that shared awareness in collective action has three levels: 1) When everybody knows something; 2) When somebody knows what everybody knows; 3) When everybody knows that everybody knows. For example, he talked about how radios transformed German Panzer tanks from military hardware into a new form of coordinated weapon, while the French saw tanks as accessories to infantry units. And today Internet apps are more pervasive and powerful than Walkie Talkies.
On a human level, Shirky shows how Social Media and the Internet is changing the way we interact, and how reciprocity, altruism, and even love are central in this new world. He even says that the Internet is making the physical world and relationships more important than ever. For these values to succeed, however, he states the need for social density and continuity, factors present in social media and in big cities. Shirky also tips his hat to Gladwell's work in the Tipping Point, which points to the value of mavens, connectors and salespeople (a hypothesis recently contested, however, through a research by Duncan J Watts PhD that indicates good ideas are actually the keys to memes going viral).
Following along on the human trail, Shirky explains Dunbar research indicating that human beings can only have about 150 meaningful relationships, and that the way these dense interrelationships interact can enhance or slow progress. Dunbar sets the stage for Metcalfe's Law, which says, "The value of the network grows with the square of its users" so when you double the size of the network, you quadruple the number of potential connections. Metcalfe's Law is the topped by David Reed's Law, which says that the value of the group actually grows exponentially since groups can splinter into numerous subgroups. As a category these theories are related to Power Laws, which include Zipps Law and the 80/20 Rule. All of this is seriously academic stuff, but when you think about it these theories explain the growth of Google, The Huffington Post and Facebook -- and why big established companies are valuable but have a hard time innovating.
Given the theoretical fixed limit of 150 meaningful human relationships, one of Shirky's solutions for the problem of Collective Action is to use connectors as ambassadors to different small groups. This is what cross-functional leaders and managers traditionally do, so it would be good to hear more about the behavioral nuances he sees. If you know of such work, send it to me @ideafood on Twitter.
This book has also made me curious about what new interpersonal behaviors this technology is creating and requiring on an individual level. How will the Internet, Social Media and Games lead to new behaviors at home work and school? What new behaviors are needed? He hints at this with his most recent book, Cognitive Surplus, which envisions could happen if people stopped watching mind-numbing TV and started doing things like write Wikipedia pages or Amazon book reviews.
And Here Comes Everybody does have interesting thoughts about business operations. Shirky says, "All businesses are media businesses, because whatever else they do, all businesses rely on managing information for two audiences -- employees and the world." He adds further, " In economic terms, capital is a store of wealth and assets; social capital is that store of behaviors and norms in any large group that lets its members support one another." Once old costs are shed, time and money can be applied to different things.
He also talks about innovation, with the value of networks as a foundation: "It's not how many people you know, it's how many kinds," and then he extols the advantages of cognitive diversity for innovation. At the same time, organizations have a difficult time innovating, because creative people are harder to manage, disruptive, and difficult to compensate, and they often don't scale well. And then there is the natural human tendency to destroy things, which Shirky believes is because destruction is easier than construction. As he says, "Anything that increases the cost of doing something reduces what gets done," and doing nothing is always easiest. The cherry on top is the personal interests and rivalries at play with regard to new ideas. Little wonder that Machiavelli advised against doing new things! Yet the world requires it more than ever.
One buried solution for innovation is simplicity. He says, "Communication tools don't become socially interesting until they become technologically boring." I love this line.
What Here Comes Everybody did not predict is that Twitter and Facebook would be used as tools to overthrow despots in Arab lands. Although Shirky did lay-out the theoretical groundwork for the multi-billion dollar valuations of Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Groupon and Zenga. Now Flipboard and Zite are putting further pressure on traditional media. A lot has happened since this book came out three years ago in 2009.
It makes me wonder, "Where things will be three years from now in 2014?"
Maybe Clay Shirky will tell us on another book. In the meantime, here are some other books on the Internet worth reading:
Collective Intelligence: Mankind's Emerging World in Cyberspace (Helix Books)
Neuromancer
The New Rules of Marketing and PR: How to Use Social Media, Blogs, News Releases, Online Video, and Viral Marketing to Reach Buyers Directly, 2nd Edition
- Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2009This good book provides a relatively concise and thoughtful explanation of social networking and its power to organize or ignite political or intellectual movements. The internet is transforming the way information is disseminated in our society. Big corporations, educational institutions and large media outlets no longer have a monopoly on the business of gathering and publishing data. This book explains and summarizes the resulting transformation of our social fabric in a way that is valuable to a wide range of readers. It also provides a few a few unique insights into specialized areas of the online world that even experts in the field may not have considered.
Some of Shirky's insights are quite valuable. In one passage he describes how the informal and geographically diverse Perl community used free web-based tools to provide better support than the C++ community received from commercial helpdesks run by large corporations. He shows how this accomplishment transforms long accepted ideas about experts and the power of conventional institutions. A group of intelligent people bound loosely together by web based communities can sometimes outperform large corporations like AT&T, Bell Labs or Intel.
He points out that if we use online tools correctly, we can easily read many summations of particular ideas, cull the best advice from these diverse sources, and combine them in powerful and innovative ways. This was something that was much more difficult to do when even the top people in a field had access to only a few other experts with whom they could share information. Now an outsider in a remote location can easily read the latest ideas from leaders in a field, and can sometimes exchange information with them. This change empowers civilians and turns the tables on conventional experts.
Shirky is understandably inclined to point out the internet's strength while glossing over its weaknesses, but he is not blind to the dark side of this new medium. Reviewers who feel he focuses only on the positive simply aren't reading the book with any care. The book could be improved by more emphasis on the dangers of the web, but it is not blind to them.
By now it is trite to make note of the power of the internet as a communications medium, or its revolutionary ability to spread knowledge through tools like Wikipedia. Indeed, this book is probably considerably less valuable now than it was when it was written only one year ago. The internet changes quickly, and tools like Facebook and Twitter have driven home many of the points that Shirky belabors in portions of this text. Still, there is a need to attempt to summarize this information, and to point out where the medium succeeds and where it fails. Shirky is a good writer, and he summarises what has happened in a graceful manner, and brings up good points that not everyone has considered.
A surprising number of intelligent people in big corporations don't understand what is happening on the Internet. They believe they are still in charge, and that their power as employees of big corporations or institutions puts them in a unique position to frame and drive public debates. This book shows the fallacy of that position, and explains how the internet has undermined the traditional roles of big media and large corporations to spread information and control debates. A great book on this subject would analyze both the power of the web, and its many dangers. This book does not go quite that far. Still, it is well written and filled with valuable insights.
Top reviews from other countries
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Mattia FrigerioReviewed in Italy on December 1, 20193.0 out of 5 stars Bel titolo, contenuti un po' diluiti
Mi aspettavo qualche nozione più approfondita, ma rimane una buona lettura per rimettere in ordine alcune idee
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cesar carneiro pennaReviewed in Brazil on October 18, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Uma visão cheia de personalidade da maior transformação pela qual passamos, a conectividade.
O livro trata do impacto das tecnologias de conectividade na sociedade como um todo.
Como estão mudando profissões, por exemplo, jornalistas e fotógrafos, e o que isso significa.
O que significa o fato de qualquer um poder criar conteúdo, publicar conteúdo e interagir com o conteúdo. Ex: Wikipedia, Twitter.
A mudança de filter than publish para publish than filter.
O tempo de adoção da tecnologia, do momento em que é lançada, até se tornar ubíqua e finalmente invisível.
São lições valiosas e o processo de desenvolvimento dos argumentos é recheado de histórias marcantes que simbolizam este período de transição que estamos vivendo para um mundo inteiramente conectado.
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AlexReviewed in Spain on July 20, 20173.0 out of 5 stars Bueno aunque sencillo
Shirky recoge una serie de información disponible en varias fuentes y la junta para trazar un libro divulgativo más que académico. Buena lectura para el que sabe poco o nada de las influencias sociales y tecnológicas en los últimos acontecimientos mundiales pero muy básico para el que sí se lo sabe.
Greg SilasReviewed in Canada on November 16, 20155.0 out of 5 stars Experts are not as smart as a group of diverse people
Big picture view of the transition from individual contributor to crowd contribution across various aspects of one's daily life. It is about empowering individuals that can individually do a decent job but as a group do a great job.
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Louis TReviewed in France on April 7, 20154.0 out of 5 stars La collaboration à un coût quasi-nul
Clay Shirky est un journaliste américain spécialiste des nouvelles technologies.
Le sous-titre "the power of organizing without organizations" résume le livre : comprendre le fonctionnement de nos organisations, puis comment les nouvelles technologies bousculent ces organisations, avec quels effets ? Le bilan reste positif vu de l'auteur, même s'il cite les "pertes" (emplois, conventions sociales et utilisation à des fins mafieuses et terroristes).
La conclusion à retenir :
1. ce qui compte n'est pas combien de personnes je connais, mais combien de genres (diversité vs. nombre) ;
2. les systèmes ouverts fonctionnent admirablement bien car ils diminuent le coût de l'échec, et permettent d'intégrer les contributions de ceux qui n'apportent qu'une idée (l'expression "failure for free" est admirable est prend tout son sens!) ;
3. il faut faire tomber les obstacles à la coopération, aller contre les idées reçues.
J'ai beaucoup apprécié la capacité de l'auteur à relier des fondamentaux sur le fonctionnement des organisations à des phénomènes nouveaux et émergents. A recommander !


