Described as an open-source medium for social innovation, the purpose is part OpenIDEO, part Quora, aiming to find the collective creativity and knowledge of what's fashionably referred to as "the crowd" in solving the most urgent social problems of our time. It calls itself a "new capitalist brand" built on "transitioning from competitive advantage to collaborative advantage."Core to the creation are two ideas not commonly seen in tandem: The belief that the capitalist paradigm has the capacity to solve global poverty and the concern that the planet's environmental limits are being pushed to unreasonable extremes. But in an age when the economic shock of private corporations rivals that of nations - according to the World Bank, Wal-Mart's 2009 revenue eclipsed the GDP of Norway - not enlisting the king and background of brands in addressing our most time- and resource-intensive issues would be short-sighted at best. At least that's Bogusky`s idea with COMMON, which aims to get a bridge between "consumers" - that's us, the common people - and corporations in order to, as the project's mission states, "design a capitalism that spreads love and prosperity to all its stakeholders." The start is equal parts conceptual vision and empirical experiment in reinventing capitalism for, for lack of better words, the usual good.Bogusky's career has been the number of much conversation and controversy in recent months. Last year, he left his namesake agency, creative hot-shop Crispin Porter Bogusky, king of the ad industry's castle of awards-driven meritocracy and even crowned Agency of the 10 by Advertising Age, only to stop advertising altogether a few months later. In some kind of Don-Draper-gone-good move, he set out to make The FearLess Cottage in his adopted hometown of Boulder, Colorado - a hub for entrepreneurs, activists and artists, fueled partly by his celebrated creative flair and partly, it seems, by the guilt of having been incredibly well for incredibly long at propagating conspicuous consumption. It was there that Park was born.To be sure, the opinion of socially conscious consumerism - or what Rachel Botsman has termed "collaborative consumption" - is far from radical, especially in the buzzword-infested business world where catchphrases like "triple bottom line" have been steadily creeping into corporate manifestos for almost a decade. The topic, however, seems to be especially dear to prominent ad industry expats. This month also marks the resolution of We First - a new volume by Simon Mainwaring, a former Nike creative at Wieden Kennedy and worldwide creative director at Ogilvy. Two years in the making, the book explores how social media and emerging technologies bring brands and consumers together to have a more socially and economically prosperous world. The real question, of course, is whether and how well Bogusky will be open to pull the social signal from the ad-speak noise and really get a meaningful platform for collaborative consumption. Then again, if anyone can achieve the exhilarating air of optimism coalesce into tangible, actionable change, it's Alex Bogusky. And he's got a museum of awards to prove it.

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