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Lift Conference
                                         Design Research Findings


                                                    June 11, 2010


© 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
Contents

    Introduction                                                                  4

    Networking Beats Content                                                     11

    Content Still Matters                                                        17

    Making the Workshops Work                                                    22

    Create Centres of Gravity                                                    28

    Do the Basics Really Well                                                    30




                                © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.        2
© 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   3
Introduction

The Lift conference hosts a unique, diverse, and inspirational gathering whose
success can be traced back to a mindset that challenges assumptions, dismisses
the status quo, and asks questions others avoid. It is precisely this mindset that
drove Lift to come to frog for a novel collaboration.
Lift asked to be ‘put under the design microscope’ by using design research
techniques to find out how attendees really perceive the conference and what
they like – and don’t like – about it. Lift recognized that the results may expose
flaws, but took the point of view that these presented opportunities.
frog is honored to have been part of this initiative, and pleased to provide this
detailed set of findings from our research on the Lift 10 conference in Geneva,
Switzerland, in May of 2010. We hope these findings are useful for planning future
Lift conferences.




                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   4
The design research approach
Design research is a primarily qualitative approach of using observations and
interviews to discover people’s true behaviors, perceptions, and unmet needs. It
is an iterative process of observing, analysing the data, coming up with ideas and
hypotheses based on the analysis, and then repeating the process to further
improve understanding.




It involves spending time in an environment – in this case the Lift conference
itself – and gathering large quantities of observations and anecdotes. These
individual pieces of data are analysed and clustered into themes.
The themes formed the basis of the frogThink workshop for generating new ideas
about how to improve the Lift experience.

                                                  © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   5
What we did




frog carried out a number of parallel activities during the three days of the
conference:
•  Observation of attendees’ behaviors and of presentations and workshops
•  Ad hoc interviews with attendees to get their impressions
•  Experience diaries that 50 Lift attendees filled out on the first day
•  Monitoring of conference Twitter feeds
•  Analysis of photos emailed from Lifters’ camera-phones
•  Conducted a frogThink ideation workshop with about 20 attendees




                                                   © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   6
Experience diaries
50 Lifters volunteered at check-in to fill out experience diaries to track their
highs, lows, and networking experiences during the first day. Networking was
tracked by noting the color of a new contact’s LIFT badge.




                                                  © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   7
frogThink workshop
frog invited about 20 Lifters to a one hour frogThink session on day two to
generate ideas for improving Lift, using four themes from our research so far. We
used an ideation activity called Random Entry to help participants make the leap
from traditional thought patterns to creative, innovative thought patterns




                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   8
Our findings

This document describes the collected findings and groups them into several
themes:
•  Networking beats content
•  Content on the main stage still matters
•  Making the workshops work
•  Create centres of gravity
•  Do the basics really well

Throughout we include quotes, observations, Tweets, and ideas for
improvements, shown as follows:


   frog observations and         Tweets
   anecdotes                                                           Ideas, suggestions and
                                                                       food for thought


At the end of some sections we also describe some of the ideas from the
frogThink workshop (which didn’t cover all the above themes as they had not all
been defined by the time of the workshop)

                                                © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   9
Contact:
Till Grusche, Senior Marketing Manager (till.grusche@frogdesign.com)


frog wishes to thank Laurent Haug and Nicolas Nova for their interest in using
design research to study the Lift experience.



                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   10
1 / Networking Beats Content
   The ability to meet and share ideas with a
   diverse range of interesting people is the
       major reason people come to Lift




                                                11
The diversity of Lift is a huge draw

 Meeting a diverse range of people is a key goal, at least as important as the
 presentations themselves




          “I like the connecting of universes            “The diversity at Lift is amazing.”
          and ideas.”




          “The people and the networking                 “Lift people are so inspirational.”
          are the powerful part.”




                                     “Relatively many female
                                     speakers at #lift10.”




                                                               © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
Lift feels like a family reunion with new family always joining
 People like the mix of newcomers and old faces. They expect to see some past
 Lifters, and to connect with Lift newcomers. People new to Lift can feel like they
 are not yet members of the family.

                                                                      “As a newbie, #lift10 feels
                                                                      like a gathering of a family
                                                                      you don’t know yet. Let’s
                                                                      see if 3 days can make you
                                                                      part of it.”




                                                                        One woman in her 50’s
                                                                        observed that Lift is a great
                                                                        way to get inspiration from
      “#lift10 #meet #like                                              younger people.
      @faveeo @encoreungeek
      @kian @genckas having
      lunch great ideas about
      aggregation curation and
      tagging.”                                                         Is there more Lift could do
                                                                        to help seasoned and new
                                                                        Lifters connect?


                                                   © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
Networking at Lift has some unusual challenges
Lifters are not the “usual” business crowd. They may not have business cards,
making remembering who you’ve talked to and staying in touch di cult. They are
from many countries, and speak many languages. This can make striking up
conversations intimidating, and people often cluster by language.


                                                             Is there more Lift could do to
                                                             help people of di erent
                                                             languages and nationalities
                                                             connect? Or maybe
                                                             encouraging people to
                                                             overcome their hesitancy is
                                                             part of creative serendipity?




                                                             The Lift community/profile
                                                             networking tool is one way of
                                                             helping people connect after
                                                             the conference. But a more
                                                             immediate, tangible alternative
                                                             for people who don’t have
                                                             business cards may be useful.


                                               © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   14
Lifters rely on each other for advice during the conference
 Using in-person as well as social-networked conversations, Lifters ask for and
 o er advice on which workshops to attend, and logistical information such as
 what the wi-fi code is.




                                                                       “Looks like there’s no
                                                                       pressroom but found a
                                                                       couple of desks between
                                                                       rooms 13 & 14 so I set up
                                                                       my own. Come join me.”




                                                  © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   15
frogThink Idea: Lift Family Tree
 Some ways to help people make their first introductions with the Lift family:
                    Create a buddy system that
                    pairs up Lift old-hands with
                    newcomers. The veteran
                    Lifters can show the
                    newcomers around them,
                    introduce them, and in turn
                    maybe meet some
                    unexpected people.




                          Require people to register
                          and get food in pairs (can be
                          separate from the buddy
                          system idea). Encourage
                          people to break the ice of
                          starting a new conversation
                          by giving them a reason to
                          connect.




                                                          © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   16
2 / Content Still Matters
  While networking is very important, the
 quality of presentations is still a big draw




                                                17
Keynote presentations
People still have high expectations of being informed, inspired and seeing
something compelling and new from the keynote presentations (such as Russell
Davies, below). There seemed to be a feeling that the main presentations this
year were not as consistently good as in past years, especially on the first day.




    “# lift10 very deceptive                                          “#lift10 has relaxed
    presentation on old media.                                        previous years' design
    A lot of videos I have                                            aesthetic for speakers'
    already seen. No analysis.”                                       slides of more graphics,
                                                                      fewer bullet points: a
                                                                      disappointment #dislikes”




                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
Audience engagement varied hugely
Some speakers really engaged well with the audience, others did not. With so
many distractions available (email, web, Twitter…) the speakers have to work
much harder to keep an audience’s attention.



                                                                     Could Lift help speakers
                                                                     with ways to better engage
                                                                     with the increasingly
                                                                     sophisticated and
                                                                     demanding audience?



                                                                     Is the burden all on the
                                                                     speakers, or should there be
                                                                     expectations about
                                                                     attention span from the
                                                                     audience to?




                                                © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.      19
Open Stage talks well received
Open Stage talks were the small jewels in the program. Lifters really seemed to
respond well to them and very much liked their diversity. The short talks had an
energy, focus, and emphasis on personal work that was sometimes lacking in the
“big” talks.




                                                © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   20
frogThink Idea: Content Mash-Up

Allow the audience to visually mash-up slides from various speaker’s
presentations, together with live Twitter chat to create new presentations that
link ideas together.
This encourages audience interaction to be more reflective on a session rather
than just reacting to single presentations.




                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   21
3 / Making the Workshops Work
   Lifters really enjoyed the workshops that were
  well-run and engaging. But this was probably the
      least consistent aspect of the conference,
          leading to some disappointments.




                                                     22
Workshops were most successful when hands-on
The workshops that were interactive, hands-on, and which broke groups into
small teams to work collaboratively were the most successful




 The Mobile Apps workshop                                         Participants praised the
 (shown here) was a                                               eBook workshop for its
 success: hands on,                                               content and ability to
 prototypes to work with,                                         connect with people inside
 small groups, speaker had                                        and outside the eBook
 run it several times before                                      arena. A self-described
                                                                  eBook expert said that
                                                                  even she learned
                                                                  something




                                               © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
Lecture “workshops” were not well received
Workshops that primarily consisted of lecture were not considered successful or
as useful


                                                                     This is a user-submitted
                                                                     photo of one lecture-based
                                                                     workshop




                                                                     “Enabling Spaces
                                                                     workshop is coming to an
                                                                     end. Had expected more.
  Can Lift “curate” workshop                                         Too much lecture, too little
  formats to help ensure                                             interactivity. Way too many
  consistency and quality?                                           slides.”




                                                © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
Workshops need a critical mass of people to be successful
“Critical mass” in workshops is important – having a good density of people (ratio
of room size to number of people). Helps the workshop feel vibrant and energetic.




  The VJ workshop (shown
  here) was more lecture than
  workshop, and had very few                                          Can Lift balance the
  attendees. Low energy &                                             quantity of participants
  engagement. People perhaps                                          across the workshops more
  afraid to leave because it                                          proactively to help create
  would be “obvious” in such a                                        the necessary density and
  small group.                                                        group sizes?




                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
Furniture in workshops helps – or gets in the way
Easily movable chairs and desks really helped the workshop dynamic and let
groups collaborate easily. Fixed furniture, rows of desks, and built-in equipment
made it harder.




                                                                    The rows of desks and the
                                                                    microphones and
                                                                    headphones hindered the
                                                                    dynamic group
                                                                    interactions that we saw in
                                                                    rooms where chairs and
                                                                    tables could be moved.




                                                  © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   26
Workshop presenters benefit from guidance
Presenters of workshops, especially those running them for the first time,
appreciate guidance from Lift about what to expect in terms of facilities and
audience, and how to best run their workshops.




  The presenter of this
  eBook workshop felt like he
  was well prepared by Lift
  and understood what the
  room set-up and audience
  was going to be like.




                                                  © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   27
4 / Create Centres of Gravity
  There are multiple ways to create centres of
      gravity that give people opportunities
    and excuses to meet and exchange ideas




                                                 28
Food is an enabler of networking
Food helps people network: Tables give places to congregate, chance encounters
happen when getting food, and refreshing a drink or plate gives people an excuse
to leave one group and join another.




                                                © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
Food is an enabler of networking (cont.)
The co ee tables during the breaks were too small, only allowing about 3 people
to talk. Discourages bringing new people into existing groups at the tables. On the
first day the co ee/food stations were out at the edges of the room which
dispersed the crowd, while on the second day they were more evenly distributed
which helped the crowd mingle better.


 Day 1, co ee and food at                     Day 2, lots more co ee and
 the edges of the room                        food, and all over the room




                                                  © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   30
The CICG building poses some challenges to networking
The lobby in the conference center has thick pillars that made it hard to scan the
room for familiar faces, find a specific person, or find a new group to join. The
long ledges and benches in the building encourage people to string out in rows,
focusing on their laptops rather than each other.




                                                  © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   31
Help Lifters connect with speakers before and after their talks
 People want to follow up with presenters after their talks, but given the large
 space and crowd, finding them can be di cult. People also wanted to know more
 about the talks and workshops before they occurred, and get a feel for the
 personality and topics of the speakers beyond bios/descriptions on the Lift site.


                                                                       Is there more Lift could do
                                                                       to help promote each talk
                                                                       and workshop, and connect
                                                                       speakers to audience even
                                                                       before the presentations?
                                                                       Photos of speakers will help
                                                                       Lifters identify them ahead
                                                                       of time.



                                                                       Presenters could go to a
   Teach Me To Make did                                                designated area after their
   some self-promotion for                                             talks so that Lifters could
   their gadget-making demo                                            know to meet them there.




                                                  © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.      32
Mingling networking, relaxing, and working is di cult
Networking, getting “real work” done, and relaxing or decompressing are all
activities that need to occur for di erent people at di erent times at a conference
as large as Lift. Having them all occur mostly in a single space (the lobby) is
problematic.


                                                                       Consider a “decomp-
                                                                       ression” or “quiet” zone
                                                                       where people can work or
                                                                       just relax, away from the
                                                                       noise of networking




                                                  © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   33
Hot gadgets are centres of gravity
Hot gadgets (e.g. iPad, below) brought by Lifters are themselves excuses to
strike up a conversation with an unfamiliar person. Gadgets and cutting-edge
technologies brought by vendors showing at Lift are also e ective, but at Lift 10
were too removed from the main crowd.




                                                                       “Playing with Microsoft
                                                                       Surface at #lift10 #like.
                                                                       The device is super neat!
                                                                       They should put at least 5
                                                                       in the lobby.”




                                                  © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.    34
Demos create crowds
New product and vendor demos and hands-on interactions drew small crowds,
however they were somewhat isolated from the main gathering space.




                                             © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   35
Badges can work harder
The name badges could do more to help people connect by providing more
information about the person (interests, language, etc.). The word stickers
supplied by Lift were a fun idea but not widely used (exception below), many
people did not see them in their bags or understand what they were for.


                                                                      The Lift 10 badges had the
                                                                      person’s first name in
                                                                      small text, last name in
                                                                      large text. Switch to make
                                                                      first name readable at a
                                                                      glance, especially given
                                                                      international crowd and
                                                                      accents. (Especially
                                                                      embarrassing for women
                                                                      who have people staring at
     “#lift10 has relaxed                                             their chests trying to read
     previous years' design                                           their names!)
     aesthetic for speakers'
     slides of more graphics,
     fewer bullet points: a
     disappointment #dislikes”




                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.     36
Badge colours
As part of the design research approach, we introduced the suggestion to
attendees that the colours on the badges may be of significance, to see if this
a ected behavior and networking. The experience diaries asked people to track
which colours of people they networked with. We found that attendees did start
to assign meanings to the colours, which were in fact randomly assigned.




                                                © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   37
Badge colours (cont.)
We asked people to suggest what colour they felt like after a day of networking.
Though colour assignment was random, this encouraged participants to engage
with the diary and become more conscious about the connections they made.
Results showed that though some people chose to believe they belonged to a
particular group, most believe and wish to be an individual.




                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   38
frogThink Idea: Gravity Zones

Create di erent zones for di erent types of activities:


                     High-energy zone with
                     centres of gravity to attract
                     people. For example, a Lift
                     trampoline for people who
                     need to get rid of some extra
                     energy.




                     A Wi-Fi-free zone where         Organize the attendees into the shape of the Lift
                     network connectivity is         logo, photograph it as a memento. Gives people
                     unavailable, encouraging        a fun activity and also encourages serendipitous
                     people to network in person     meeting.
                     rather than virtually.


                     A power-nap zone where
                     people can take quick breaks
                     from the noise of the main
                     event.




                                                       © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.    39
5 / Do the Basics Really Well
 Even if the content and networking are great, the
    basic logistics and infrastructure still need to
                    be taken care of




                                                       40
Way-finding in the space was problematic
The CICG space is strangely di cult to navigate given that it’s just a loop. Room
numbers seem randomly distributed on floors. Maps of the Lift rooms were not
plentiful enough nor where people expected them to be. The balloon signage was
fun and on-theme, but the balloons twisted and shrank over time which made
signage change or disappear from view.




                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   41
Comfort and networking were good
The CICG main hall was comfortable to sit in for long periods, and the tables with
power outlets convenient for keeping laptops on. The wi-fi stability and bandwidth
were highly appreciated.




                                                                  “#lift10 #like wifi robustness”




                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.    42
Improve the check-in experience
As the first interaction with Lift, the check-in helps create a mood for the first day.
There were some frustrations over it taking too long and having to wait in line.




                                                                            “Rough start to #lift10 -
                                                                            Queuing for registration,
                                                                            no time left for co ee, now
                                                                            in a workshop on
                                                                            #innovation enabling
                                                                            spaces...”




                                                                            “At check-in there were too
                                Think like Disneyland: What                 many people and too-few
                                can Lift do to keep people                  desks” – Journal entry
                                entertained/informed while
                                they are waiting in line?




                                                       © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.     43
Create a greeting experience
Once checked in, there were not enough obvious centres of gravity and way-
finding mechanisms to help people feel at home and find their way around.




                                                                    What could Lift do to help
                                                                    people start networking the
                                                                    minute they get past check-
                                                                    in, and in the first break of
                                                                    the day?




                                               © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.      44
frogThink Idea: People Previews

After people check in they record a short video introducing themselves, their
interests, and what they are planning to see at the conference. These videos are
then immediately played back on screens lined up where people are queuing to
check in, giving them a sense of who else is attending, and keep them occupied
while waiting to check in.




                                                 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   45
Themes Summary




                 46
Themes Summary

 Networking          The ability to meet and share ideas with a diverse range of
                     interesting people is the major reason people come to Lift
 Beats Content

 Content Still       While networking is very important, the quality of presentations
                     is still a big draw
 Matters

 Making the          Lifters really enjoyed the workshops that were well-run and
                     engaging. But this was probably the least consistent aspect of
 Workshops Work      the conference, leading to some disappointments.


 Create Centres of   There are multiple ways to create centres of gravity that give
                     people opportunities and excuses to meet and exchange ideas
 Gravity

 Do the Basics       Even if the content and networking are great, the basic logistics
                     and infrastructure still need to be taken care of
 Really Well

                                           © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   47
© 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   48
About frog design

frog design is a global innovation firm. We work with the world’s leading
companies, helping them create and bring to market meaningful products,
services, and experiences. Our multidisciplinary process reveals valuable
consumer and market insights and inspires lasting, humanizing solutions. With a
team of more than 500 designers, technologists, strategists, and analysts, we
deliver fully convergent experiences that span multiple technologies, platforms,
and media. We work across a broad spectrum of industries, including consumer
electronics, telecommunications, healthcare, media, education, finance, retail,
and fashion. Our clients include Disney, GE, HP, Intel, Microsoft, MTV, Qualcomm,
Seagate, Siemens and others. Founded in 1969, frog is headquartered in San
Francisco, with studios in Amsterdam, Austin, Milan, Munich, New York, Seattle,
and Shanghai.


Contact: Till.Grusche@frogdesign.com




                                                © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.   49

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Lift Conference Design Research

  • 1. Lift Conference Design Research Findings June 11, 2010 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
  • 2. Contents Introduction 4 Networking Beats Content 11 Content Still Matters 17 Making the Workshops Work 22 Create Centres of Gravity 28 Do the Basics Really Well 30 © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 2
  • 3. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 3
  • 4. Introduction The Lift conference hosts a unique, diverse, and inspirational gathering whose success can be traced back to a mindset that challenges assumptions, dismisses the status quo, and asks questions others avoid. It is precisely this mindset that drove Lift to come to frog for a novel collaboration. Lift asked to be ‘put under the design microscope’ by using design research techniques to find out how attendees really perceive the conference and what they like – and don’t like – about it. Lift recognized that the results may expose flaws, but took the point of view that these presented opportunities. frog is honored to have been part of this initiative, and pleased to provide this detailed set of findings from our research on the Lift 10 conference in Geneva, Switzerland, in May of 2010. We hope these findings are useful for planning future Lift conferences. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 4
  • 5. The design research approach Design research is a primarily qualitative approach of using observations and interviews to discover people’s true behaviors, perceptions, and unmet needs. It is an iterative process of observing, analysing the data, coming up with ideas and hypotheses based on the analysis, and then repeating the process to further improve understanding. It involves spending time in an environment – in this case the Lift conference itself – and gathering large quantities of observations and anecdotes. These individual pieces of data are analysed and clustered into themes. The themes formed the basis of the frogThink workshop for generating new ideas about how to improve the Lift experience. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 5
  • 6. What we did frog carried out a number of parallel activities during the three days of the conference: •  Observation of attendees’ behaviors and of presentations and workshops •  Ad hoc interviews with attendees to get their impressions •  Experience diaries that 50 Lift attendees filled out on the first day •  Monitoring of conference Twitter feeds •  Analysis of photos emailed from Lifters’ camera-phones •  Conducted a frogThink ideation workshop with about 20 attendees © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 6
  • 7. Experience diaries 50 Lifters volunteered at check-in to fill out experience diaries to track their highs, lows, and networking experiences during the first day. Networking was tracked by noting the color of a new contact’s LIFT badge. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 7
  • 8. frogThink workshop frog invited about 20 Lifters to a one hour frogThink session on day two to generate ideas for improving Lift, using four themes from our research so far. We used an ideation activity called Random Entry to help participants make the leap from traditional thought patterns to creative, innovative thought patterns © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 8
  • 9. Our findings This document describes the collected findings and groups them into several themes: •  Networking beats content •  Content on the main stage still matters •  Making the workshops work •  Create centres of gravity •  Do the basics really well Throughout we include quotes, observations, Tweets, and ideas for improvements, shown as follows: frog observations and Tweets anecdotes Ideas, suggestions and food for thought At the end of some sections we also describe some of the ideas from the frogThink workshop (which didn’t cover all the above themes as they had not all been defined by the time of the workshop) © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 9
  • 10. Contact: Till Grusche, Senior Marketing Manager (till.grusche@frogdesign.com) frog wishes to thank Laurent Haug and Nicolas Nova for their interest in using design research to study the Lift experience. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 10
  • 11. 1 / Networking Beats Content The ability to meet and share ideas with a diverse range of interesting people is the major reason people come to Lift 11
  • 12. The diversity of Lift is a huge draw Meeting a diverse range of people is a key goal, at least as important as the presentations themselves “I like the connecting of universes “The diversity at Lift is amazing.” and ideas.” “The people and the networking “Lift people are so inspirational.” are the powerful part.” “Relatively many female speakers at #lift10.” © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
  • 13. Lift feels like a family reunion with new family always joining People like the mix of newcomers and old faces. They expect to see some past Lifters, and to connect with Lift newcomers. People new to Lift can feel like they are not yet members of the family. “As a newbie, #lift10 feels like a gathering of a family you don’t know yet. Let’s see if 3 days can make you part of it.” One woman in her 50’s observed that Lift is a great way to get inspiration from “#lift10 #meet #like younger people. @faveeo @encoreungeek @kian @genckas having lunch great ideas about aggregation curation and tagging.” Is there more Lift could do to help seasoned and new Lifters connect? © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
  • 14. Networking at Lift has some unusual challenges Lifters are not the “usual” business crowd. They may not have business cards, making remembering who you’ve talked to and staying in touch di cult. They are from many countries, and speak many languages. This can make striking up conversations intimidating, and people often cluster by language. Is there more Lift could do to help people of di erent languages and nationalities connect? Or maybe encouraging people to overcome their hesitancy is part of creative serendipity? The Lift community/profile networking tool is one way of helping people connect after the conference. But a more immediate, tangible alternative for people who don’t have business cards may be useful. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 14
  • 15. Lifters rely on each other for advice during the conference Using in-person as well as social-networked conversations, Lifters ask for and o er advice on which workshops to attend, and logistical information such as what the wi-fi code is. “Looks like there’s no pressroom but found a couple of desks between rooms 13 & 14 so I set up my own. Come join me.” © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 15
  • 16. frogThink Idea: Lift Family Tree Some ways to help people make their first introductions with the Lift family: Create a buddy system that pairs up Lift old-hands with newcomers. The veteran Lifters can show the newcomers around them, introduce them, and in turn maybe meet some unexpected people. Require people to register and get food in pairs (can be separate from the buddy system idea). Encourage people to break the ice of starting a new conversation by giving them a reason to connect. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 16
  • 17. 2 / Content Still Matters While networking is very important, the quality of presentations is still a big draw 17
  • 18. Keynote presentations People still have high expectations of being informed, inspired and seeing something compelling and new from the keynote presentations (such as Russell Davies, below). There seemed to be a feeling that the main presentations this year were not as consistently good as in past years, especially on the first day. “# lift10 very deceptive “#lift10 has relaxed presentation on old media. previous years' design A lot of videos I have aesthetic for speakers' already seen. No analysis.” slides of more graphics, fewer bullet points: a disappointment #dislikes” © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
  • 19. Audience engagement varied hugely Some speakers really engaged well with the audience, others did not. With so many distractions available (email, web, Twitter…) the speakers have to work much harder to keep an audience’s attention. Could Lift help speakers with ways to better engage with the increasingly sophisticated and demanding audience? Is the burden all on the speakers, or should there be expectations about attention span from the audience to? © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 19
  • 20. Open Stage talks well received Open Stage talks were the small jewels in the program. Lifters really seemed to respond well to them and very much liked their diversity. The short talks had an energy, focus, and emphasis on personal work that was sometimes lacking in the “big” talks. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 20
  • 21. frogThink Idea: Content Mash-Up Allow the audience to visually mash-up slides from various speaker’s presentations, together with live Twitter chat to create new presentations that link ideas together. This encourages audience interaction to be more reflective on a session rather than just reacting to single presentations. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 21
  • 22. 3 / Making the Workshops Work Lifters really enjoyed the workshops that were well-run and engaging. But this was probably the least consistent aspect of the conference, leading to some disappointments. 22
  • 23. Workshops were most successful when hands-on The workshops that were interactive, hands-on, and which broke groups into small teams to work collaboratively were the most successful The Mobile Apps workshop Participants praised the (shown here) was a eBook workshop for its success: hands on, content and ability to prototypes to work with, connect with people inside small groups, speaker had and outside the eBook run it several times before arena. A self-described eBook expert said that even she learned something © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
  • 24. Lecture “workshops” were not well received Workshops that primarily consisted of lecture were not considered successful or as useful This is a user-submitted photo of one lecture-based workshop “Enabling Spaces workshop is coming to an end. Had expected more. Can Lift “curate” workshop Too much lecture, too little formats to help ensure interactivity. Way too many consistency and quality? slides.” © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
  • 25. Workshops need a critical mass of people to be successful “Critical mass” in workshops is important – having a good density of people (ratio of room size to number of people). Helps the workshop feel vibrant and energetic. The VJ workshop (shown here) was more lecture than workshop, and had very few Can Lift balance the attendees. Low energy & quantity of participants engagement. People perhaps across the workshops more afraid to leave because it proactively to help create would be “obvious” in such a the necessary density and small group. group sizes? © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
  • 26. Furniture in workshops helps – or gets in the way Easily movable chairs and desks really helped the workshop dynamic and let groups collaborate easily. Fixed furniture, rows of desks, and built-in equipment made it harder. The rows of desks and the microphones and headphones hindered the dynamic group interactions that we saw in rooms where chairs and tables could be moved. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 26
  • 27. Workshop presenters benefit from guidance Presenters of workshops, especially those running them for the first time, appreciate guidance from Lift about what to expect in terms of facilities and audience, and how to best run their workshops. The presenter of this eBook workshop felt like he was well prepared by Lift and understood what the room set-up and audience was going to be like. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 27
  • 28. 4 / Create Centres of Gravity There are multiple ways to create centres of gravity that give people opportunities and excuses to meet and exchange ideas 28
  • 29. Food is an enabler of networking Food helps people network: Tables give places to congregate, chance encounters happen when getting food, and refreshing a drink or plate gives people an excuse to leave one group and join another. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary.
  • 30. Food is an enabler of networking (cont.) The co ee tables during the breaks were too small, only allowing about 3 people to talk. Discourages bringing new people into existing groups at the tables. On the first day the co ee/food stations were out at the edges of the room which dispersed the crowd, while on the second day they were more evenly distributed which helped the crowd mingle better. Day 1, co ee and food at Day 2, lots more co ee and the edges of the room food, and all over the room © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 30
  • 31. The CICG building poses some challenges to networking The lobby in the conference center has thick pillars that made it hard to scan the room for familiar faces, find a specific person, or find a new group to join. The long ledges and benches in the building encourage people to string out in rows, focusing on their laptops rather than each other. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 31
  • 32. Help Lifters connect with speakers before and after their talks People want to follow up with presenters after their talks, but given the large space and crowd, finding them can be di cult. People also wanted to know more about the talks and workshops before they occurred, and get a feel for the personality and topics of the speakers beyond bios/descriptions on the Lift site. Is there more Lift could do to help promote each talk and workshop, and connect speakers to audience even before the presentations? Photos of speakers will help Lifters identify them ahead of time. Presenters could go to a Teach Me To Make did designated area after their some self-promotion for talks so that Lifters could their gadget-making demo know to meet them there. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 32
  • 33. Mingling networking, relaxing, and working is di cult Networking, getting “real work” done, and relaxing or decompressing are all activities that need to occur for di erent people at di erent times at a conference as large as Lift. Having them all occur mostly in a single space (the lobby) is problematic. Consider a “decomp- ression” or “quiet” zone where people can work or just relax, away from the noise of networking © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 33
  • 34. Hot gadgets are centres of gravity Hot gadgets (e.g. iPad, below) brought by Lifters are themselves excuses to strike up a conversation with an unfamiliar person. Gadgets and cutting-edge technologies brought by vendors showing at Lift are also e ective, but at Lift 10 were too removed from the main crowd. “Playing with Microsoft Surface at #lift10 #like. The device is super neat! They should put at least 5 in the lobby.” © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 34
  • 35. Demos create crowds New product and vendor demos and hands-on interactions drew small crowds, however they were somewhat isolated from the main gathering space. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 35
  • 36. Badges can work harder The name badges could do more to help people connect by providing more information about the person (interests, language, etc.). The word stickers supplied by Lift were a fun idea but not widely used (exception below), many people did not see them in their bags or understand what they were for. The Lift 10 badges had the person’s first name in small text, last name in large text. Switch to make first name readable at a glance, especially given international crowd and accents. (Especially embarrassing for women who have people staring at “#lift10 has relaxed their chests trying to read previous years' design their names!) aesthetic for speakers' slides of more graphics, fewer bullet points: a disappointment #dislikes” © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 36
  • 37. Badge colours As part of the design research approach, we introduced the suggestion to attendees that the colours on the badges may be of significance, to see if this a ected behavior and networking. The experience diaries asked people to track which colours of people they networked with. We found that attendees did start to assign meanings to the colours, which were in fact randomly assigned. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 37
  • 38. Badge colours (cont.) We asked people to suggest what colour they felt like after a day of networking. Though colour assignment was random, this encouraged participants to engage with the diary and become more conscious about the connections they made. Results showed that though some people chose to believe they belonged to a particular group, most believe and wish to be an individual. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 38
  • 39. frogThink Idea: Gravity Zones Create di erent zones for di erent types of activities: High-energy zone with centres of gravity to attract people. For example, a Lift trampoline for people who need to get rid of some extra energy. A Wi-Fi-free zone where Organize the attendees into the shape of the Lift network connectivity is logo, photograph it as a memento. Gives people unavailable, encouraging a fun activity and also encourages serendipitous people to network in person meeting. rather than virtually. A power-nap zone where people can take quick breaks from the noise of the main event. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 39
  • 40. 5 / Do the Basics Really Well Even if the content and networking are great, the basic logistics and infrastructure still need to be taken care of 40
  • 41. Way-finding in the space was problematic The CICG space is strangely di cult to navigate given that it’s just a loop. Room numbers seem randomly distributed on floors. Maps of the Lift rooms were not plentiful enough nor where people expected them to be. The balloon signage was fun and on-theme, but the balloons twisted and shrank over time which made signage change or disappear from view. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 41
  • 42. Comfort and networking were good The CICG main hall was comfortable to sit in for long periods, and the tables with power outlets convenient for keeping laptops on. The wi-fi stability and bandwidth were highly appreciated. “#lift10 #like wifi robustness” © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 42
  • 43. Improve the check-in experience As the first interaction with Lift, the check-in helps create a mood for the first day. There were some frustrations over it taking too long and having to wait in line. “Rough start to #lift10 - Queuing for registration, no time left for co ee, now in a workshop on #innovation enabling spaces...” “At check-in there were too Think like Disneyland: What many people and too-few can Lift do to keep people desks” – Journal entry entertained/informed while they are waiting in line? © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 43
  • 44. Create a greeting experience Once checked in, there were not enough obvious centres of gravity and way- finding mechanisms to help people feel at home and find their way around. What could Lift do to help people start networking the minute they get past check- in, and in the first break of the day? © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 44
  • 45. frogThink Idea: People Previews After people check in they record a short video introducing themselves, their interests, and what they are planning to see at the conference. These videos are then immediately played back on screens lined up where people are queuing to check in, giving them a sense of who else is attending, and keep them occupied while waiting to check in. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 45
  • 47. Themes Summary Networking The ability to meet and share ideas with a diverse range of interesting people is the major reason people come to Lift Beats Content Content Still While networking is very important, the quality of presentations is still a big draw Matters Making the Lifters really enjoyed the workshops that were well-run and engaging. But this was probably the least consistent aspect of Workshops Work the conference, leading to some disappointments. Create Centres of There are multiple ways to create centres of gravity that give people opportunities and excuses to meet and exchange ideas Gravity Do the Basics Even if the content and networking are great, the basic logistics and infrastructure still need to be taken care of Really Well © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 47
  • 48. © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 48
  • 49. About frog design frog design is a global innovation firm. We work with the world’s leading companies, helping them create and bring to market meaningful products, services, and experiences. Our multidisciplinary process reveals valuable consumer and market insights and inspires lasting, humanizing solutions. With a team of more than 500 designers, technologists, strategists, and analysts, we deliver fully convergent experiences that span multiple technologies, platforms, and media. We work across a broad spectrum of industries, including consumer electronics, telecommunications, healthcare, media, education, finance, retail, and fashion. Our clients include Disney, GE, HP, Intel, Microsoft, MTV, Qualcomm, Seagate, Siemens and others. Founded in 1969, frog is headquartered in San Francisco, with studios in Amsterdam, Austin, Milan, Munich, New York, Seattle, and Shanghai. Contact: Till.Grusche@frogdesign.com © 2010 frog design. confidential & proprietary. 49