We used this approach for a proposal in response to a request from the Conservation Fund's Forum on Children and Nature. The goal of the program is to reconnect children with nature and has implications for, at least, obesity, mental health, and conservation. We proposed development of a multi-stakeholder, multisided, online platform that would help engage all the groups potentially involved in the issue from the National Parks, to non-profit conservation groups, to children's safety experts, to commercial vendors (not just REI, but Burger King and McDonalds too). The idea is that by providing services to support the specific needs of these divergent groups we could link them together and thereby dramatically increase the scale and efficiency of response, promote innovation throughout the system, and do it at amazing speed.
The proposal was accepted into the second round of the competition. However, we decided we didn't have the internal resources to carry it out and declined to take it further. We learned that two of the implications of this approach are deep-pockets and patience -- tough for a small online strategy firm.
Nonetheless, we continue to think about these approaches and encourage others to as well. We have released the proposal, "Nature Commons: Building a shared online infrastructure to help engage children with nature," under a creative commons license as a case study and concept, hoping that it generates ideas for you. Please take a look and let me know what you think -- the document is short and reasonably clear.
Nature Commons: Building a shared online infrastructure to help engage children with nature by Forum One Communications is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License.