We Media

Good Air: Lessons From We Media Buenos Aires

Our first We Media regional summit was a spectacular success last week in Buenos Aires. More than 250 people packed the auditorium at the stunning MALBA museum for contemporary art (we hoped to see 150). But success wasn’t simply a matter of numbers. The conversations at We Media Buenos Aires refreshed my thinking about how the planet will be transformed through media produced by everyone.


The summit also tested and validated the value of regional We Media events and chapters. We’re eager to conduct others where local interest and local sponsorship is strong. If you’re interested in organizing a We Media event, regional conference or group in your city, contact me through the We Media Community.

In Buenos Aires we stayed true to our curious selves and attracted an intriguing mix of participants from a variety of industries with a variety of experiences and interests. We bubbled and blended into a rich soup of conversation and connections. Executives from MySpace, LinkedIn, Google, DailyMe, BBDO, Ogilvy, Bloomberg, Clarin and many other companies mixed it up with journalists, bloggers, activists and corporate marketers. The interest in the idea of We Media was encouraging. The hunger for cultural innovation and business opportunities expressed through media produced by everyone was inspiring.

In Buenos Aires, most of the conference discussions and Twitter back channel was in Spanish, as was the live blogging within the We Media Community. John Bell from Ogilvy PR wrote two summaries in English (here and here). We’re working on posting presentations to the participant networking group within the We Media Community.

Here are some of my key take-aways:

The definitive blueprint for how our global, connected culture will inform and improve itself through media remains elusive. But my travels, observations and conversations with creative people like those who joined us in Buenos Aires convince me that we’re in the earliest stages of life-altering changes. The outcome – for communities, for companies, for culture and for the planet as a whole – remains painfully uncertain. There’s still lots of work ahead, lots of trial and error – and lot’s of room for investment, invention and creation by smart people and organizations using media to change the world.

We Media Buenos Aires photos via Flickr:
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