how would people describe your judgment your knowledge your behaviors in different situations
today i 'd like to
explore with you why the answer to this question will become
profoundly important in an age where
reputation will be your most
valuable asset i 'd like to start by introducing you to someone whose life has been changed by a marketplace fueled by reputation
i caught up with him recently where over the course of several cups of tea he told me how hosting guests from all over the world has enriched his life more than fifty people have come to stay in the eighteenth century watchhouse he lives in with his cat
squeak now
i mention
squeak because sebastian 's first guest
as many of you know airbnb is a peer to peer marketplace that matches people who have space to rent with people who are looking for a place to stay in over one hundred and ninety two countries
the places being rented out are things that you might expect like spare rooms and
holiday homes but part of the magic is the
unique places that you can now
of how technology is creating a market for things that never had a marketplace before now let me show you these heat maps of paris to see how insanely fast it 's growing this image here is from two thousand and eight
the pink dots represent host properties even four years ago letting strangers stay in your home seemed like a crazy idea
now the same view in two thousand and ten and now two thousand and twelve there is an airbnb host on almost every main street in paris now
from skills to spaces to material possessions in ways and on a scale never possible before it 's an
economy and
culture called collaborative
consumption and through it people like sebastian are becoming micro entrepreneurs they 're empowered to make money and save money from their existing assets
but the real magic and the secret source behind collaborative
consumption marketplaces like airbnb isn 't the inventory or the money it 's using the power of technology to build trust between strangers
connections that are enabling us to rediscover a humanness that we 've lost somewhere along the way by engaging in marketplaces like airbnb like kickstarter like etsy that are built on personal relationships versus empty transactions
to the wonderful world of collaborative
consumption that 's enabling us to match wants with haves in more democratic ways now
but the key reason why it 's
taking off now so fast
is because every new
advancement of technology increases the
efficiency and the social glue of trust to make sharing easier and easier
now i 've looked at thousands of these marketplaces and trust and
efficiency are always the
critical ingredients let me give you an example
meet forty six year old chris mok who has i bet the best job title here of superrabbit now
now the story behind taskrabbit starts like so many great stories with a very cute dog by the name of kobe
leah quit her job and taskrabbit was born
at the time she didn 't realize that she was
actually hitting on a bigger idea she later called service networking it 's
essentially about how we use our online relationships to get things done in the real world
now the way taskrabbit works is people outsource the tasks that they want doing name the price they 're
willing to pay and then vetted rabbits bid to run the
errand yes
but i love that the number one task posted over a hundred times a day is something that many of us have felt the pain of doing yes assembling ikea furniture
and seventy percent of this new labor force were
previouslyunemployed or underemployed i think taskrabbit and other examples of collaborative
consumption are like
lemonade stands on steroids they 're just
brilliant now
connecting trustworthy strangers to create all kinds of people powered marketplaces
will
transform the way we trust one another face to face
now with all of my optimism and i am an optimist comes a
healthy dose of
caution or rather an
urgent need to address some pressing
complex questions
how to ensure our digital identities
reflect our real world identities do we want them to be the same how do we mimic the way trust is built face to face online how do we stop people who 've behaved badly in one
community doing so under a different guise
in a similar way that companies often use some kind of credit rating to decide whether to give you a mobile plan or the rate of a mortgage
marketplaces that depend on transactions between
relative strangers need some kind of
device to let you know that sebastian and chris are good eggs and that
device is reputation
reputation is the
measurement of how much a
community trusts you
now
laughter i love that word superrabbit and interestingly what chris has noted is that as his
reputation has gone up so
the difference today is that with every trade we make
comment we leave
thirty million rides have been shared on carpooling com this year two
billion dollars worth of loans will go through peer to peer lending platforms this adds up to millions of pieces of
reputation data on how well we
behave or misbehave
now capturing and correlating the trails of information that we leave in different places is a
massivechallenge but one we 're being asked to figure out
what the likes of sebastian are starting to rightfully ask is shouldn 't they own their
reputation data shouldn 't the
reputation that he 's
personally invested on building on airbnb mean that it should travel with him from one
community to another
what i mean by this is say he started selling second hand books on
amazon why should he have to start from scratch
it 's a bit like when i moved from new york to
sydney it was
ridiculous i couldn 't get a mobile phone plan because my credit history didn 't travel with me i was
essentially a ghost in the
system now
adding up tweets and likes and friends in a clout like fashion those guys are measuring influence not behaviors that indicate our trustworthiness but the most important thing that we have to keep in mind is that
reputation is largely contextual
just because sebastian is a wonderful host does not mean that he can
assemble ikea furniture the big
challenge is figuring out what data makes sense to
it 's only a matter of time before we 'll be able to perform a facebook or google like search and see a complete picture of someone 's behaviors in different contexts over time i envision a realtime
stream of who has trusted you when where and why
your reliability on taskrabbit your
cleanliness as a guest on airbnb the knowledge that you display on quora or unclear they 'll all live together in one place
now this is a
concept that i 'm currently researching and
writing my next book on and currently
define as the worth of your
reputation your intentions capabilities and values across communities and marketplaces
this isn 't some far off
frontier there are
actually a wave of startups like connect me and legit and trustcloud that are figuring out
how you can
aggregatemonitor and use your online reputation
now i realize that this
concept may sound a little big brother to some of you
and how he bought the cat to influence his now
that value into
reputation capital
ultimately when we get it right
reputation capital could create a
massivepositive disruption in who has power trust
and in many instances limit what we can do in the world indeed
reputation is a
currency that i believe will become more powerful than our credit history in the twenty first century
reputation will be the
currency that says that you can trust me
now the interesting thing is
reputation is the socioeconomic lubricant that makes
collaborative
consumption work and scale but the sources it will be generated from and its applications are far bigger than this space alone
tech bloggers and entrepreneurs joel spolsky and jeff atwood
decided to start something called stack overflow
now stack
overflow is basically a
platform where
experienced programmers can ask
other good programmers highly detailed
technical questions on things like tiny pixels and chrome extensions
and it
actually didn 't surprise them what they heard was that users were putting their
reputation scores on the top of their resumes
and that recruiters were searching the
platform to find people with
unique talents now thousands of programmers today are
finding better jobs this way because stack
overflow and the
reputation dashboards provide a
priceless window into how someone really behaves and what their peers think of them
but the bigger principle of what 's
happening behind stack
overflow i think is
incredibly exciting people are starting to realize that the
reputation they
generate in one place has value beyond the environments from which it was built
they all talk about how having a high
reputation unlocks a sense of their own power
on stack
overflow it creates a level playing field enabling the people with the real
talent to rise to the top on airbnb the people often become more important than the spaces on taskrabbit it gives people control of their economic activity
he 's turning fifty this year and he 's convinced that the rich
tapestry of
reputation he 's built on airbnb will lead him to doing something interesting with the rest of his life
we 're living through one of those moments i believe that we are at the start of a collaborative revolution that will be as
significant as the
industrial revolution
in the twentieth century the
invention of
traditional credit transformed our
consumersystem and in many ways controlled who had
access to what
thank you very much
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