What's on?
Thursday, November 5th, 2009
14:00 – 15:30
After 3 days of presentations come join an hour of informal roundtable discussions to get answers on your specific questions. Each table has no more than 10 attendees and a specific theme or topic with a pre-assigned moderator.
First come first served and you don't get to see who's at the table till you get there.
Themes & tables
What's on - Roundtable discussions
- "Build and manage a community that makes users want to participate" hosted by Christian Schwarz Lausten
- "Citizen centered eGovernment. What else?" hosted by Erik Hartman
- "Emerging problems, emerging technologies, and emerging approaches to Web Content Management" hosted by Janus Boye
- "Improve your existing website or intranet using agile development and virtual teams to reduce costs and implementation cycles" hosted by Martin Frederiksen
- "Intranets to Go - Killer apps for the intranet on a mobile phone" hosted by Neil Morgan
- "Killer content or content that kill - Is your CMS solution creating value? Or is it getting in the way of building the shared references you need to establish to increase your conversion rates?" hosted by Eric Reiss
- "Make management listen - put business back in web strategy" hosted by Hannu Vangsgaard
- "SharePoint 2010: Far from Las Vegas" hosted by Peter Nissen
- "Sitecore challenges and solutions. Bring your questions and discuss with peers" hosted by Lars Fløe Nielsen
- "Standards -- what do YOU want from them?" hosted by Olle Olsson
- "The future is visual! - how organizations and communication are shifting from text to photos and video" hosted by Thomas Madsen-Mygdal
- "What is successful web project management?" hosted by Sara Redin
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"The J. Boye Conference was a perfect event: the emphasis was on meeting with peers and experts and exchanging experiences, which is what it should be all about. The organisers know how to maximise the opportunities for contacts and I met so many interesting people and we explored so many interesting aspects that I would have loved to stay days longer!"
- Robert Cailliau, Co-developer World Wide Web
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