Media Futures Conference 2009
Save £50 book before 21 June - Book Now Book Now

Beyond Broadcast

Friday 3 July, Bloomberg Auditorium, London, EC2

Julian Kucklich of the Press Association making a pointAudience questioning at the Media Futures Conference 2008 Brian Winston delivering his opening keynote at the Media Futures Conference 2008 Alex McKie presenting in Research in the real world at the Media Futures Conference 2008Sofa seated audience members Twittering at the Media Futures Conference 2008

SUPPORTED BY

Bloomberg Television

Press Association

Keep in touch

To receive more information about the Conference…

Join the Mailing LIst

You can also follow us on Twitter, or join our Facebook group.

Follow us on Twitter

Join our Facebook group

The conference attracts a wide range of people, across media creators and organisations, disciplines and organisations roles to a discussion that benefits from their broad perspectives

Attended by 250 people in its 2008 edition, Media Futures attracts a cross-section of people involved in and working around the media sector. It is an audience of decision makers and influencers within media, technology, telecoms, design and marketing companies, as well as academia and public sector organisations.

The audience will include senior business leaders and product managers, editors and producers, journalists, marketing directors, innovation managers, advertising experts, investors, researchers and academics who have an interest in the future role of media in society.

Media Futures Conference 2008

Last year’s attendees included high-level representatives of Channel 4 News, the Financial Times, BSkyB, Capgemini, London Business School, BT, Vodafone Group R&D, Cambridge University, The Nobel Foundation and the BBC

What will you learn about?

  • Business people will learn about new economic models, and richer modes of innovation
  • Designers and technologists will learn about ground-breaking products and services, and the wider context in which they work
  • Editors and journalists will learn about new forms of content and interaction with audiences, and the contribution designers and technologists make
  • Marketers will learn about the changing character of audiences, and ground-breaking products and services
  • Researchers will learn about new research techniques, and the way in which their work is used in product development
  • Investors will learn about ground-breaking products and services, and new forms of organisation for media innovation