Posts Tagged ‘creativity’
tags:
2.0 culture, Andalucia Lab, Andalucia Web Solutions, Andalusia, brand reputation, buzz, Club Malaga Valley, Club Marketing Malaga, Cluetrain Manifesto, community management, Conversation Prism, creativity, Diario Sur, DigitalMarketingFørung, Dowbleyou, Google, hot social media topics, influential SEO, infographic, infographic mandala, interactive marketing event, internet marketing campaigns, Juan Luis Polo, Keka Sanchez, Malaga, organization, Palacio Ferias Congresos Málaga, Rene de Jong, Search Congress, search congress milan, Señor Munoz, SEO geek, SEO panel, Sico de Andres, slideshare, SMX Stockholm, social CRM, social media expert, social media geek, social media infographic, social media marketing, social media marketing presentation, social media presentation, social media research, Spain, Spanish social media market, strategic focus, strategy, Territorio Creativo, Tomas Rufino, Twitter, Twitter hero, user powered web, web 2.0 identity, Web Congress, Web Congress Malaga, Yahoo
categories:
case of the month, conferences, global business, knowledge sharing, networking, news, online interactive, search marketing, social media marketing
Best Social Media Marketing Presentation from WebCongress Málaga
At the end of September a new breed of interactive marketing event kicked off in Málaga, (Andalusia, Spain).
A spin-off from the classic series of Search Congress events, Web Congress Málaga is also the brain child of Ouali Benmeziane and his team, and featured an interesting new format: six different track on search marketing, social media marketing, interactive marketing and also on web design, development and hosting.
Add a line up of top speakers for the conference on day one, a series of workshops on day two, a great participative audience, amazing networking opportunities and, as always, a stunning event location (the brand new Palacio de Ferias y Congresos de Málaga), and Web Congress Málaga easily turn into the best online marketing conference I moderated this year.
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tags:
Al Gore, Amy Tan, Bill Clinton, Bill Gates, Bill Joy, bizarre ideas, Bono, buddhism and happiness, Chris Anderson, climate change, creativity, David Carson, David Deutsch, David Perry, democracy, Derek Sivers, Design, diversity, Elizabeth Gilbert, Entertainment, Evan Williams, experience design, freeconomy, future tech, Google, inspirational keynotes, inspiring keynotes, Isabel Allende, Jacek Utko, James Randi, Jane McGonigal, Jill Tarter, JJ Abrams, Joshua Klein, Kevin Kelly, Larry Page, Lee Smolin, Long Tail, Martin Seligman, Matthieu Ricard, Michael Shermer, online games, organic design, Paola Antonelli, parallel worlds, passion, Paula Scher, Philippe Starck, positive psychology, Pranav Mistry, Richard Branson, Ross Lovegrove, Sergey Brin, Seth Godin, SETI, Stefan Sagmeister, Steve Jobs, strange beliefs, Technology, TED, TED Talks, Twitter, videogames
categories:
business, case of the month, conferences, global business, knowledge sharing, news
Is it Weird, Different or Inspiring? A few Lessons from TED Talks
I love TED Talks, the series of inspirational keynotes that bring together the smartest people from three worlds: Technology, Entertainment and Design (hence, TED). Started in 1984, the project now got to a much larger scope, inviting to deliver a keynote the most influential, inspiring and ingenious people of our society, people with a vision, with courage and with a little more than something to say – they say things that can change the world, or at least your way of thinking.
TED is much more than TED Talks. There are two TED Conferences in Long Beach and Palm Springs each spring, a TED Global conference in Oxford (UK) each summer, the TED Talks video site, a TEDx program for TED events worldwide (one of the most famous is TED Talks India) and an annual TED Prize award. TED spreads out also into the Open Translation and Open TV Projects, equally cutting edge initiatives.
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