Chris Masse’s year end summary of Prediction Markets activity for 2004 gave a pointer to an article from Time Magazine back in July that I had skimmed earlier. When I looked at it again, I found references to internal markets at Microsoft, Eli Lilly, and Intel that I hadn’t noticed before. It seems worth the time to gather together references to all the internal market experiments I’ve heard about, since most of them haven’t been written up formally as far as I’ve been able to tell.
Company | subject | organizer | references |
---|---|---|---|
HP | sales level | Charles Plott | Time, Plott & Chen |
Eli Lilly | drug efficacy | Eli Lilly | Time |
Microsoft | developer acceptance of new releases | Todd Proebsting | Time |
Intel | assignment of chip production to plants | Tom Malone | Time |
British Petroleum | Pollution Credit trading * | internal | Tom Malone: The Future of Work |
Siemens | software development scheduling | Gerhard Ortner |
Ortner |
* I should mention that the BP case was trading internal pollution credits, while all
the others seem to have been Idea Futures markets.
I’ve added several more examples to a copy of
this table on the CommerceNet wiki. They include Google, Corning, and Rite Solutions