Close
E-mail It
  • 05
  • Dec, 07

Highest-rated speaker at Inverge 2007 tapped as emcee for Inverge 2008

We’re pleased to announce that Renny Gleeson, Global Director of Digital Strategies at ad agency Wieden + Kennedy and the highest-rated speaker at Inverge 2007 (according to the post-event evaluation survey), as agreed to be the master of ceremonies at Inverge 2008: the interactive convergence conference.

You can read Renny’s blog at http://wk.typepad.com/.

Inverge 2008 is scheduled for September 4 + 5, 2008 at the Gerding Theater in the Pearl District of Portland, OR USA.

  • 01
  • Dec, 07

Date and Location Set for Inverge 2008

Mark your calendar!

We’re thrilled to announce that the date and location have been confirmed for Inverge 2008: the interactive convergence conference.

The event will be Thursday and Friday, September 4 + 5 at the same venue as 2007: the Gerding Theater in the Pearl District of Portland, OR.

As with 2007, this will be concurrent with PICA’s Time-Based Art FestivalMusicFestNW and the First Thursday Gallery Walk, so we again plan to make those events accessible to paid Inverge 2008 attendees.

If you have speaker and/or topic ideas for Inverge 2008, please use the interactive dialog on the Inverge site.

  • 16
  • Sep, 07

Inverge 2007: Anatomy of a Changing Media Culture

by Sharon Rockey

What happens when you mash-up “interactive” and “convergence?”  You get what Steve Gehlen of IndePlay, Inc. has aptly dubbed “invergence,” a term that sums up what’s occurring across the board in today’s media.  When Gehlen read Henry Jenkin’s Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide and followed it up by reading Wikinomics, it sparked a chain reaction that culminated in a first of its kind event—Inverge 2007.

Today, with digitized content and a plethora of multi-directional distribution channels, we can interact with media in ways that are changing our old concepts of entertainment, advertising and marketing.  The results are a new media culture that makes it harder to distinguish between those who produce and those who were formerly passive consumers.

To help make sense of it all, Gehlen created a two-day event that brought forward-thinking professionals to the Gerding Theater on September 6-7, 2007 to meet media and marketing experts from Portland, as well as imports from as far away as the Netherlands and Australia. Presenters shared their observations, experiences and predictions about the future of interaction between consumers and content.

The speaker line-up included Joshua Green of MIT, Bill Barnett of 926 Ventures, Jeff Yapp of MTV, Mark Deuze from Leiden University, Chris Van Dyke from Nau, Renny Gleason from Wieden + Kennedy, to name just a few. Topics ranged from how technology’s landscape is altering our culture (and visa-versa) to building brands in the midst of this invergence, and from relinquishing some content control to the consumer to using technology to create communities and a more sustainable world.

Joshua Green of the MIT Convergence Culture Consortium discussed what he terms the “new media logics” and the cross-over between multiple media platforms – from movies to videos games to web-based communities filled with new story lines written by fans, to participation and immersion in 3D virtual spaces like secondlife.com where the audience can solve fictional crimes.  And while Green noted that fans are now essentially co-producers, sometimes even improving on the producer’s work, he reminded us that there will always be a need for professionals in creative fields – and then showed a butt-ugly Heinz ad to prove his point.

Mark Deuze, Professor, Journalism and New Media at Leiden University painted a less than rosy picture of convergence and asked what it all really means to those whose livelihoods depend on creating media.  Since the culture has gradually pushed back from blind acceptance of so-called experts into more of a collective intelligence, what will the long-term affect be on industry professionals, writers, and other media producers? In just two of his examples, you could glimpse the potential for enabling technology and online social networks to be cause for concern:
1.) A consumer-produced Super Bowl TV commercial for Doritos had a budget of $12.79, and
2.) Now that Fox Interactive Media owns My Space, every story and comment ever posted there can be freely mined and re-purposed for their own use. Period.
Deuze closed with a reminder that it’s people, not technology, that create culture and that the most successful agencies, brands, and producers will still be those that look for, hire, and value talent.

That message was seconded by Renny Gleeson, Digital Strategies Director for Wieden + Kennedy. Even though he admitted that they are all still trying to figure out how to best work within the changing environment, he stressed that ad agencies will always be vital to clients seeking new ways to connect with and engage consumers. 

Dalen Harrison, CEO of Ensequence, demonstrated a few applications of the latest iteration of the company’s interactive TV technology including the recent Nike Zoom interactive TV campaign. While not yet in wide-spread usage, the most compelling indicator for future expansion was, according to Harrison, that Beth Comstock, President, Integrated Media, NBC Universal has earmarked $2B for research into ITV for 2009.

With the topic heading of “How the FF Button is Squeezing Your Ad Dollar,” Bill Barnett of 926 Ventures cautioned advertisers to rethink everything they’ve learned or ever done in their professional lives. Gone are the days of single-sponsored TV shows like The Texaco Star Theater/ Milton Berle Show.  Today, with Tivo and PVRs, advertisers need savvy ways to get their messages across.  He cited examples of subtle organic and seamless brand integration such as the resorts showcased as centerpieces in the TV show The Bachelor, or the more blatant product placement like drinking Coke while judging contestants on American Idol.

While Fox Interactive Media is poised to cherry pick from other people’s stories, there’s one risk-taking entrepreneur with a more altruistic business model.  Ten months before Nau’s CEO, Chris Van Dyke opened his first active-wear retail store, he’d already engaged an online audience at the Thought Kitchen, a blog where like-minded people meet to share ideas and experiences that can make positive changes in the world.

Van Dyke has taken invergence to new levels. In four small-scaled retail locations, referred to as “Webfronts” the Nau brand blends community, technology, and global-wide social activism in unique ways.  Customers are encouraged to use the stores as fitting rooms, make their purchases online via self-serve kiosks, and get a 10% discount and free shipping as an incentive. Then from a menu of humanitarian and environmental organizations, they select their favorite to receive 5% of their purchase price. And what about stories? The Nau website invites consumer submissions and if yours is one of three stories selected for publication each month, you receive $1500.

All the presenters agreed that in today’s media culture, engagement and participation are keys to success. As the old and new media continue to collide, Gehlen plans to return next year with Inverge 2008.  If it’s anything like this year’s event, you’ll definitely want to participate and engage with the experts who play on the front lines of the media invergence.

Sharon Rockey is a freelance writer covering finance and technology.  Visit her Web site at www.webspinstudios.com.

  • 23
  • Aug, 07

Lori H. Schwartz, Director of Interpublic Emerging Media Lab, added to Inverge 2007 program

We have added Lori H. Schwartz, SVP and Director of the Interpublic Emerging Media Lab, to the list of presenters at Inverge 2007.

As many of you know, the Interpublic Group is a global agency holding company.

This is really great news for our inaugural year.  Lori is well known and respected in the industry and will bring great experience and insight to the multi-disciplinary program.

In June I visited Lori at the Emerging Media Lab and talked to her about my ideas for the conference.  She got it right away because they were already tuned into two of the books that inspired me to create the conference: Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide and Wikinomics.  After the meeting Lori graciously agreed to be on the Inverge Advisory Board.

Lori manages what I think must be one of the coolest spaces on the planet.  The Lab has one of about every convergence communications devices available.  Here are some pictures I took:

 Interpublic Emerging Media Lab

Interpublic Emerging Media Lab

Interpublic Emerging Media Lab

Interpublic Emerging Media Lab

  • 15
  • Aug, 07

Web site for Inverge 2007 conference launches

Today the web site for Inverge 2007: the interactive convergence conference went live.  See www.inverge.com

 Thanks to Jessica Bernert at Pail Design for he main visual identify and Marc Ricketts at GuildWorks for his input into that process.  I can’t wait to see how Marc translates the visual identity into a set and lighting design.

 Thanks to Jason Love, Meggan Shadel and Todd Quackenbush at eROI for their project management, production and design work on the site respectively.  Special thanks to Dylan Boyd of eROI for his support.

 Take a look at the site and provide your feedback (good or bad) via a comment to this post.

Copyright © 2007 IndePlay, Inc.
invergence is proudly powered by WordPress
Furry Palms theme by Djonka | Modified by eROI.