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PRELIMINARY SCHEDULE
Wednesday, 5 September
- 1:00PM - 4:00PM
Walking Tour of Berlin
- 5:00PM - 6:30PM
Welcome Reception
Thursday, 6 September
- 8:00AM
Registration, Breakfast & Networking
- 8:45AM
Welcoming Remarks
Ken Wasch,
President, SIIA
Ed Keating, Vice President, Content Division, SIIA
- 9:00AM - 9:45AM
Keynote
Peter Hendriks, President, Global Publishing and Marketing, Springer
- 9:45AM - 10:45AM
From Network to Community: Building Business with New Collaboration Tools for Staff, Customers, and Even Curious Bystanders
While international publishers learn to manage far-flung enterprises, they're also figuring out how to manage their far-flung end users and how to draw them into the editorial/promotional process. If customer feedback, interaction, and participation is the future, B2B publishers need to build the right communities, and the tools and systems to make them a sustainable part of business activities.
- How can we tap into existing communities (MySpace, Second Life)?
- How can we manage positive and negative feedback? What are the risks of connecting customers?
- How can (and when should) B2B publishers draw users into the creation process?
- How can we get experts, and more senior people, to participate?
- Can we make our communities persistent and sustainable?
- How do we build loyalty and trust?
- What's the value of community? Will people pay to be connected to one another?
- Can community be measured, and how?
- What social media are appropriate for my business?
Moderator:
Kate Noerr, CEO, MuseGlobal
Panelists:
Karen Christensen, CEO, Berkshire Publishing
Erik Mikisch, Vice President - Business Development, ThomasNet
Frans van Ette, Director of Product Marketing and Partnerships, Swets
- 10:45AM - 11:15AM
Networking Break
- 11:15AM - 11:45AM
Opportunities in the Middle East
Adonis El Fakih, CEO, Ayna.com
introduced by Todd Mickelsen, VP, FAST
B2B and B2C sites in the Middle East are proliferating. Websites addressing both these markets, as well as sites which offer content for any audience and for many verticals are on the rise. Middle Eastern companies focusing on different types of content are increasing in number, as is work through EMEA and other traditional channels by non-Middle Eastern companies. This briefing covers the topic from the perspective of a company that both originates in the Middle East and is a content provider.
- 11:45AM - 12:15PM
Undiscovered Genius
Matthew Hong, Vice President and General Manager, Open Web Markets, Thomson Gale
Interviewed by Frank Bilotto, Vice President, Publishing and Digital Media; MuseGlobal, Inc.
- 12:15PM - 1:15PM
Lunch
- 1:15PM - 2:00PM
Luncheon Keynote:
Innovation & Technology –
The Keys to Serving Customers
John “Jack” Lynch, Member of the Executive Board, Wolters Kluwer
- 2:00PM - 2:30PM
Getting into the Game and Winning:
Non-U.S. Companies in the U.S. Market
Robin Neidorf, General Manager, FreePint Ltd.
Companies large and small want to gain a foothold in the United States because even though it has only 5% of the world’s population, the United States consumed approximately $25.1 billion of the total (according to AAP). But the U.S. is notably insular. Only 5% of titles are translated from other languages, and that percentage is falling.
Questions this session will answer:
- What’s unique about the U.S. market?
- Where are the present and future opportunities for non-U.S. publishers?
- How can you identify potential partners? What is likely to appeal to a U.S. partner or distributor?
- Does the ‘long tail’ operate for non-U.S. publishers and can they sell directly into the U.S. market?
- What are the barriers to entry and how have companies overcome them?
- 2:30PM - 3:00PM
Contrast Between the European and Asian Information Economies
Joachim Bartels, Chairman, Intrepid Explorers, Inc.
Dr. Willi Bredemeier, Password, Germany
A special discussion on:
- Business models that win in Germany
- The development of the information economy in Germany and Europe
- Why Germany and Europe appear to be losing their competitive edge vis a’ vis Asia?
- 3:00PM - 3:30PM
Networking Break
- 3:30PM - 4:15PM
Crossing the Divides:
Strategies for Understanding and
Bridging Cross-Cultural Differences
The Global Information Industry Summit affords us all the opportunity to explore our industry from different cultural perspectives. Our industry and the companies in it are increasingly global, requiring us to develop a new level of sensitivity and awareness about building successful business relationships with partners, employees, and customers in different cultures. Overseas posts can last a few weeks or a few years. Close business partnerships can be formed between entities on different continents.Part panel, part role-play, part workshop, this session will challenge participants to identify their own assumptions about business norms and process through a cross-cultural lens. Practical examples on everything from contract negotiations to employee training opportunities to the inevitable “I just said what?” anecdotes will offer useful tips for better communication and understanding, while tabletop exercises will encourage communication among participants. Come with your own questions about better ways to communicate; leave with practical tools for evaluating the cross-cultural aptitude in your organization.
Moderator:
Randy Marcinko, CEO, Marcinko Enterprises, Inc.
Panelists:
Jim Hammond, Executive Vice-President, Marketing ISI Emerging Markets
Jenny Zhan, Managing Partner, Power-info.com / Eivycom GmbH, Switzerland
- 4:15PM - 5:15PM
Place in the Middle Kingdom:
Publisher Case Studies from China
Companies large and small are gaining a foothold in the world’s most populous and economically dynamic country. Developing successful partnerships is essential, especially for media organizations, and changing regulations provide both threat and opportunity. Companies that aren’t in China yet want to know what it takes, and to have answers to basic questions like when, where, and how? In this session, experienced Western and Chinese experts present diverse case studies: from companies (1) expanding in China, (2) just entering the Chinese market, and (3) scaling back on Chinese operations. The session will wrap up with an overview of the issues-and the pitfalls-common to all these situations, ensuring that attendees get information and advice they can act on as they develop China strategies or expand their existing business in China.
Moderator:
Karen Christensen, CEO, Berkshire Publishing
Panelists:
Lou Celi, Senior Vice President, Publishing Director, Economist Intellingence Unit
Paul Evans, Senior Vice President International Publishing Development, Elsevier
Duncan McCampbell, Director International Online, Thomson
- 6:00PM-11:00PM
Zitadelle Restaurant
Networking Reception & Dinner at a Medieval Castle
co-sponsored by Mark Logic & TEMIS
Friday, 7 September
- 8:00AM
Registration, Breakfast & Networking
- 9:00AM - 10:00AM
Keynote:
The British (Digital) Library adapts to Web 2.0
Lynne Brindley, Chief Executive, British Library
The British Library, arguably the most significant library in the world, has successfully transformed its many and varied functions to the digital environment, building on the challenges and opportunities of Web 2.0. This keynote address focuses on these areas and talks about the British Library’s transformation under the stewardship of Lynne Brindley, its Chief Executive.
- 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
Turning Content into “Smart Content”
to Create New Opportunities
While the digital revolution and in particular the Internet continue to change the way content is distributed, Publishers are now faced with new challenges to tackle in order to take full advantage of the greatest opportunities these technologies bring along. Lower distribution costs and increasing competition from specialized players have led Publishers to focus their efforts on:
- Creating new high added value content,
- Repurposing existing content for multi-channel distribution (Print, Web, CD-Rom, etc.),
- Managing content production and distribution costs,
- Offering new access to content and information.
Publishers and vendors will present on how they have come up with best practices to compete in their markets.
Moderator:
Ed Keating, Vice President, Content Division, SIIA
Panelists:
Jörn Erbguth, Head of IT, juris GmbH
Mike Hale, Vice President, VitalSource
Jeff Schultz, Vice President, McGraw Hill Education
Vincent Smyth, VP of Information Publishers, Macrovision
- 11:00AM - 11:30AM
Networking Break
- 11:30AM - 12:30PM
“Can’t Read Won’t Buy”
Ben Sargent, Senior Analyst, Common Sense Advisory
Joergen Danielsen, Managing Director, Eule Lokalisierung GmbH
Al Girardi, Chief Marketing Officer, Innodata Isogen
Online user behavior and language preferences can have a direct impact on your distribution strategy. “Can’t Read, Won’t Buy” describes the results of an eight-nation survey conducted in July and August 2006. It includes the responses from over 2,400 consumers who answered questions about their behavior and preferences for website visits and purchases, in English and in their own language, across a wide range of product types.
Ben Sargent, Senior Analyst at Common Sense Advisory will present these finding and then discuss with the panelists.
- 12:30PM - 1:30PM
Lunch
- 1:30 PM - 2:30 PM
Copyright 2.0-Rights Implications
and User-generated Content
Web 2.0 has presented an entirely new set of challenges as we deal in a world where user generated content is the norm and new content delivery schemes are rapidly changing. Mashups, blogs and RSS feeds to name a few are enabling content to be delivered to our desktops in new and unique ways.
- Content creators are concerned that they are losing exceedingly more control over their content while others welcome the great brand awareness these new content types promote.
- Users either don’t know what rights are associated with the content or don’t care.
- Lawyers have yet to enter the fray as no legal precedent or legislation has been developed-and while copyright still applies its interpretation varies as recent legal activities illustrate.
- Even technology providers are scratching their heads as to how they can provide world class solutions to develop and disseminate new forms of content while respecting the rights of content owners.
This session will delve into somewhat uncharted territory as we hear from experts from all sides of the equation sharing their own experiences with these new rights challenges and their observations of how things might pan out in the future. International implications will be considered and we will review relevant legal issues being explored by the courts in various countries. Key issues include:
- Who owns all this content and what rights need to be considered?
- How do these rights differ across the globe?
- What impact is social media having on intellectual property?
- What steps are being taken to make sure users have the freedom to create new content sources while the rights of the IP owners are respected?
Moderator:
Ed Colleran, Senior Director, Rightsholder Relations, Copyright Clearance Center
Panelists:
Dan Gisolfi, IT Software Architect, Emerging Internet Technologies IBM Software Group
Robert Lands, Partner, Finers Stephens Innocent LLP
Greg Merkle, Vice President, Creative Director, Dow Jones Enterprise Media Group
- 2:30PM - 3:00PM
Networking Break
- 3:00 PM - 3:45PM
Endnote Keynote:
How Well are We Navigating
the Global Information Waters?
Arnoud de Kemp, Founder, digilibri
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