The c&binet ‘unconference’

Nick | 06 Nov 2009, 11:16

One of the most difficult aspects of creating c&binet forum was the need for a programme that would unite a broad range of people from across the creative spectrum. C&binet’s diversity (though not always manifesting itself on the main stage) was its greatest strength and its biggest challenge.

Complementing the main sessions was a series of fringe events, to allow us to introduce a wider range of topics for discussion and help attendees make best use of their time. We asked ourselves every day whether we’d done enough to ensure c&binet suited all tastes and requirements.

c&binet unconference, c&binet forum 2009

The answer is that we hadn’t, but in one sense, it didn’t matter. C&binet forum ended up providing a practical demonstration of the diminished role of the content gatekeeper in the digital age.
While on-stage, people were discussing the power of the internet to mobilise communities to create their own content and find their own audiences, off-stage, delegates were using Twitter to do just that. Towards the end of the second day, using the hashtag #outofthecloset, an “unconference” sprang-up in the foyer, for some of the delegates to debate what issues mattered most to them.

c&binet unconference, c&binet forum 2009

c&binet unconference, c&binet forum 2009

Most of the unconference attendees represented smaller companies, for whom the debate about IP protection taking place in the main hall was perhaps less relevant (although part of the discussion at c&binet was about how to streamline the copyright system, so that start-ups could license the use of content more quickly and easily) or design companies, for whom this year’s theme of “nurturing creative content in the digital age” had relatively little to offer. It was a fascinating and lively discussion and impressively organised, with the group quickly split in to subgroups to address two key questions: ‘what do we want from government?’ and ‘what do we want from c&binet?’ The emphasis was placed on practical solutions, such as early-stage legal advice on the copyright system for start-ups.

You can read summaries of the discussions by Jaya Chakrabarti from Nameless here and Claire Reddington from Pervasive Media Studio here.

An undoubted highlight of c&binet 2009, the unconference underlined the potential of the creative industries to work together to shape the future of the creative economy. The c&binet team will now investigate how we can reflect the issues highlighted in the future c&binet programme.

c&binet unconference, c&binet forum 2009

c&binet unconference, c&binet forum 2009