When: Mon November 12, 2012 5:30 pm
Organization: Fresh Tilled Soil & Webby Awards
Location: Brightcove Offices, 290 Congress St, Boston MA
Speaker(s): Richard Banfield, Jeff Zemetis
Website: http://webby-talks-boston.eventbrite.com/

Fresh Tilled Soil & Webby Awards bring WebbyTalks to Boston! The WebbyTalks World Tour is
traveling to more than 100 tech companies around the globe to share the
latest trends in all things digital to provoke and inspire all of us to
develop and create for the ever-changing landscape of the online
world. Jeff Zemetis Senior Producer at WebbyAwards, the leading international award for digital excellence, will give a talk entitled: "Cookies and Controversy," delving into topics including data and privacy, potential hazards of sharing information, how user funnels influence user experience, and how to stay on top of issues of customer sensitivity regarding use of personal data. Richard Banfield, the founder and CEO at Fresh Tilled Soil,
will give a talk entitled: "Best Practices in Visualizing Data" which
will explore common problems associated with big data visualization and
propose some enlightened solutions. In this talk Richard will talk about
the best practices and methods of connecting real-world customer needs
to big data's promise of a more efficient and response web. Fresh
Tilled Soil's team of designers designers, coders and UX experts have
helped 350+ businesses such as GE Healthcare, Microsoft, Credit.com,
Walgreens and many others solve big problems with elegant and effective
web and mobile user interfaces. We're
inviting marketers, data geeks, visualization experts, consumers,
designers, developers, creatives, c-level executives, researchers, and
business minded professionals to learn about big data & design and
how it affects your customers, business, and sometimes 4th amendment
rights. ....on top of all that, you'll get a chance to meet and greet with the folks who run, organize, and produce the WebbyAwards!
What's WebbyTalks?
Who's Talking About What?
Who Should Come & Why?