Wikistrat
Type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Geostrategy |
Founded | 2009 |
Headquarters | Washington, DC, USA |
Products | Strategic intelligence |
Website | http://www.wikistrat.com |
Wikistrat Inc., or WIKISTRAT, is a geostrategic analysis firm founded in Australia in 2009 and headquartered in the United States. It describes itself as the world's first massively multiplayer online consultancy leveraging a global network of subject-matter experts.[1]
Products
Wikistrat is an online consultancy for strategic analysis and forecasting that claims to be significantly different from other consultancies.
By using a Web 2.0 platform, Wikistrat allows peer-to-peer interactions and offers a real-time "environment of collaboration where analysts can manage the information overload, and exploit the wisdom of the crowd," according to its chief analyst, Thomas P.M. Barnett. "The platform and methodology... enables the interdisciplinary deconstruction of geopolitical issues and trends in a structured yet flexible manner, to aid strategists in thinking through problems in a systematic fashion.” He has described the Wikistrat platform as "Facebook meets Wikipedia": a combination of a community of strategists and the environment of an editable and dynamic encyclopedia that is known as the Global Model (GLOMOD).[2]
The company has since prioritized the sale of analyses of particular developments and events which are strategic simulations. Its products include crowd-sourced simulations, war games, and planning exercises. Wikistrat's services allow for real-time observation and interaction with clients, as well as a completely transparent and fully archived process. This last feature contrasts significantly with traditional, "black box" consultancy firms.
Wikistrat enables analysts as well as clients to propose scenarios, inject vertical shocks or brainstorm the implications of potential geopolitical risks. The structure is developed to give strategists the ability "to map out the full spectrum of alternatives.”
Analysts
Rather than employing a stable of in-house analysts, Wikistrat maintains a network of hundreds of academics, consultants, journalist and retired government and military personnel who can be called to contribute to a given project and are compensated for their time. The company uses gamification to incentivize analysts, "by ranking them at different levels for the work they do on the platform. They are immediately rewarded through the engine," according to CEO Joel Zamel, "and we also track granular changes made in real time. This allows us to track analyst activity and encourages them to put time and energy into Wiki analysis."[3]
Among the members of Wikstrat's analytic community are Richard Weitz, Daniel Pipes, Walid Phares, Parag Khanna, Kenneth R. Timmerman, Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, Shaukat Qadir, James Joyner, James C. Bennett, Leon Hadar, Michael Rubin, Mark Galeotti and Anne-Marie Slaughter.
History
The firm was founded by Joel Zamel and Daniel Green in 2010. After studying counter-terrorism, Zamel founded Wikistrat Inc., setting himself up as CEO while Green became the company's Chief Technology Officer.
During 2012, the firm ran approximately twenty strategic simulations. The following year, it reported it had conducted more than thirty.[4]
2011 Grand Strategy Competition
Between June and July 2011, Wikistrat hosted an "International Grand Strategy Competition" which tested the company's collaborative competition approach.
More than thirty teams of MA and PhD students representing universities and think tanks participated in the month-long competition. Teams simulated thirteen countries over the course of the competition, in which they:
- analyzed country-specific economic, political and security interests
- forecasted national trajectories and future strategic environment
- defined strategic objectives
- planned a grand strategy to achieve these objectives
- stress-tested the strategies against geopolitical shocks to examine its resiliency
Participants included the UK Defence Forum,[5] the New York University School of Continuing and Professional Studies' Center for Global Affairs,[6] the University of Kentucky's Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce,[7] Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service[8] and the University of Sussex.[9] The team from Claremont Graduate University's School of Politics and Economics won the competition and a $10,000 prize.[10]
Among the more notable and published result of the competition was the New York University team's prediction that Russia would ultimately have to outsource its security if its trend of demographic decline persisted and its economy remained heavily dependent on commodity exports.[11] Participants from the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies argued that India was rooting for Pakistan's disintegration, considering the collapse of the Muslim state as a prerequisite to fully institutionalizing India's alliance with the United States.[12] Students at Sussex believed that North Korea would collapse without Chinese support and therefore recommended that the nation diversify its allies.[13]
The 2011 competition was cited by Reuters as evidence that governments and scholars of international relations were once again focusing on grand strategies "in a way not seen since the Cold War."[14]
Media exposure
In 2010, it ran a simulation on the death of North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il, the results of which were referenced (in articles by the organization's chief strategist) on CNN,[15] Time[16] and World Politics Review[17] after Kim died in late 2011.
The firm has been cited by such media outlets as CNN, Reuters, Russia Today, Fox News and NPR as a consultancy of reference for geopolitical issues.
References
- ↑ "About Wikistrat". Wikistrat. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ Barnett, Thomas P.M. "My best explanation of Wikistrat yet". Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ Ungerleider, Neal. "Why This Company Is Crowdsourcing, Gamifying the World's Most Difficult Problems". Fast Company. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
- ↑ "Year in Review: Wikistrat in 2013". Wikistrat. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
- ↑ "UK Defence Forum competes with world's best". Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ "CGA student team in global Wikistrat Grand Strategy Competition". The Global Citizen. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ Ziegler, Erin Holaday (13 June 2011). "Patterson Students WikiStrat Globally". University of Kentucky News. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ "Four Students Compete in Wikistrat International Strategy Competition". Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ Hakner, James. "Sussex students battle top strategic minds in global comp". Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ "CGU team takes first place, $10,000 prize in International Grand Strategy Competition". Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ Barnett, Thomas P.M. (23 June 2011). "Future grand strategists: Russia will someday be forced to outsource its security". Time. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ Ottens, Nick (28 June 2011). "Is India Rooting For Pakistan’s Disintegration?". Atlantic Sentinel. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ "North Korea could collapse without China, say student strategists". Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ Apps, Peter (13 May 2011). "As China rises, "grand strategy" talk back in style". Reuters. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ "China eyes North Korea's minerals; what's next?". CNN. 27 December 2011. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ Barnett, Thomas P.M. (6 January 2012). "How America Painted Itself Into A Corner on North Korean Succession". Time. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
- ↑ Barnett, Thomas P.M. (21 December 2011). "Over the Horizon: The Art of the Reasonable in North Korea". World Politics Review. Retrieved 15 January 2012.
Wikistrat featured in news media
- Thomas P.M. Barnett, Chief Analyst for WIKISTRAT interviewed by RT
- Thomas P.M. Barnett, Chief Analyst for WIKISTRAT interviewed by NPR
- WIKISTRAT Senior Analyst Kerry Patton on Fox News
External links
- WIKISTRAT's official site
- List of Wikistrat Experts
- Wikistrat: The Back Story and the Story Going Forward by Thomas P.M. Barnett