What to expect at this year’s WeaveSphere tech conference
In a technology ecosystem where experienced talent is scattered across the country, WeaveSphere presents a unique opportunity where the doers of innovation all meet in one place.
WeaveSphere is not your typical tech conference. Sure, it has amazing keynotes, collaborative breakouts, and unique activations — but that’s not what makes the je-ne-sais-quoi factor.
WeaveSphere is unique, as its name suggests, because it’s a multi-day event where ideas and actions are actually woven together.
Taking place at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre between November 15 -17, 2022, the WeaveSphere technology conference advances the innovation experience by unsiloing disciplines.
How ‘Weavers’ make this event shine
Picture it: A researcher, investor, academic, and entrepreneur all walk into an event — yes, we know, this sounds like a joke set-up. But hear us out.
The people who attend all hail from a broad-yet-interconnected range of backgrounds who come to challenge the status quo, advance research, co-create technologies, plan new initiatives, and even start businesses.
At this event attendees are called “Weavers” because they don’t come to the event to passively sit back and watch, but instead actively make connections with other researchers, founders, investors, and innovators who collaborate on big ideas.
In a technology ecosystem where experienced and right-fit talent are scattered across the country, WeaveSphere presents a unique opportunity where the doers of innovation all meet in one place.
If you’re looking to up your innovation game, here’s how you can get the most out of the event this fall.
What to expect at WeaveSphere 2022
Part of what makes the magic at WeaveSphere is the team behind it — the conference is a collaboration between IBM’s academic and research technology conference (CASCON), and Evoke’s industry-focused developer conference. In 2019 the organizations merged to pursue the mission of connecting academia and research professionals with developers, tech leaders, founders, and investors.
This year’s event marks the 32nd year IBM’s Center for Advanced Studies has hosted an industry-leading conference, so lots has been learned over three decades in creating an event that is not to be missed.
This year 2,000+ *really* smart people, 300+ subject-matter-expert speakers, and 100+ companies are expected to descend on the event in downtown Toronto, which means a whole lot of opportunities to weave these connections and ideas together.
The event still offers technical talks, engaging workshops, research presentations, and innovative exhibitors, but this year it also continues to expand to include more industry, investor, and startup programming.
The goal: Weave more people together to create innovation that matters.
WeaveSphere doesn’t just throw everyone into a room and say “go.” In addition to the everyday connections forged in and around the event, there’s a packed schedule of sessions, exhibits, pitches, learning, awards, and more.
Here are some of the activations you want to put on your calendar to get the most out of the event:
1. The DeepTech Zone
Here’s where things get, well, deep.
If technical talks, panels with subject experts, hands-on exercises, workshops, and research paper discussions are your jam, then here’s where you’ll want to pull up a chair.
Think topics like artificial intelligence, brain-computer interfaces, cloud computing, data, privacy and security, robotics, quantum computing, and so much more.
The first 50 speakers will be announced later this month at weavesphere.co. Stay tuned for a detailed event agenda soon after.
Photo courtesy WeaveSphere
2. Innovation Valley
WeaveSphere’s exhibitor showcase is called Innovation Valley for a reason. In addition to unique swag, Innovation Valley is where you’ll find innovative startups as well as established market leaders. There will be more than 200 different exhibitors Weaving in this section of the event.
Photo courtesy WeaveSphere
3. PitchStadium
It’s probably obvious by now that supporting innovation and entrepreneurship is what WeaveSphere is all about. Now, how about giving it a competitive edge?
PitchStadium is a global start-up pitch competition, targeting startups focused on AI, enterprise software solutions, blockchain, crypto, and Web3.
The opportunity to pitch a startup at WeaveSphere’s competition means having a shot at global brand awareness, attention from both investors and media, top-tier networking opportunities, and foot-on-the-gas growth. Of course, the chance to pitch live and maybe win $50,000 isn’t all that bad either.
For investors, PitchStadium means accessing new deals and networking opportunities, as well as looking at trends and challenges alongside peers.
Many educational opportunities come with a tagline such as “learn from the best,” right?
What if it were actually true?
WeaveSphere Education Day invites more than 300 students to take part in a full-day session on Design Thinking with IBM. Here, thousands of young innovators will learn more about the theory of Enterprise Design Thinking from experts in the field.
Here’s where it gets really interesting.
Working in teams of 10, students will be presented with problem statements, tasked with finding solution ideas through their newfound designing thinking skills. Groups will then pitch their solutions for the chance to win a prize.
Students will learn how to apply design thinking in school, work, and everyday projects, receiving the IBM MyLearning micro-credential at the end of the day.
To channel Oprah Winfrey: You get an award! You get an award! And YOU get an award!
Ok, not literally everyone will get an award, but how about if the top 30 developers in Canada under the age of 30 do?
Created in 2017, the Developer 30 Under 30 award shines a light on the coders, architects, and masterminds that are responsible for the industry’s technical revolutions. Nominees are evaluated based on technical skills and contributions, community involvement, and awards and scholarly contributions.
No awards were given during the COVID-19 pandemic, so the fourth annual award will be presented during this year’s WeaveSphere conference.
While we’re on the awards train, this annual award honours Canada’s top 20 most prominent innovative technology leaders of 2022.
This prestigious award recognizes those who have either disrupted an industry through the use of technology, led a digital transformation, and/or used technology in innovative ways to deliver business value.
Nominees have created or enhanced a key competitive advantage, optimized internal or external business processes, enabled growth, or enhanced client relationships.
Does all this sound interesting? Get your tickets at weavesphere.co.
DX Journal is an official media partner for WeaveSphere. We will share updates leading up to the event, and we’ll be live on location from November 15-17,2022.
Talk about archaic, for such a progressive industry.
We dove into the report to understand the severity of that disparity and what companies can do about it. Let’s start with some of the report’s key findings on founders:
13% of Web3 company founding teams have at least one woman
3% of Web3 company founding teams encompass all women
93% of Web3 founders are men
These findings above remain consistent not only in North America, but also in the Asia-Pacific and Europe. Now, this disparity unfortunately continues even when you look at the wider workforce of Web3 companies:
73% of Web3 companies’ entire workforce are men
88% of technical roles at Web3 companies are held by men
BCG also examined the role of women in Web3 founding teams by startup stage and funding amount. Sadly, the bigger the investment, the less likely a woman was to sit on the founding team. Only 7% of Web3 companies with $1B invested had women in the founding teams. Similarly, companies that received between $500M to $999M had men as founding teams.
STEM companies show similar results. While the US Census demonstrates more women achieving STEM roles, the disparity is still present. The BCG’s report backs this as well:
33% of STEM company workforces are women
25% of technical roles at STEM companies are held by women
What does BCG propose we do about it? Luckily, the early nature of Web3 offers time to rectify the gender disparity. Here are some strategies discussed:
Monitor the data: Granular, objective data collection will keep track of female representation within a company’s workforce and founders.
Include women on VC investment teams: All-male investment teams are more likely to garner all-make founding teams.
Create inclusive brand experiences: The Web3 experience should cater to a broad audience.
Stay close to regulators: Collaborate with government and organizational entities to shape regulations for this new industry.
Build mentorship and support opportunities: Diverse networks and mentorship opportunities can keep companies in check with gender equality.
Veronica Ott is a freelance writer and digital marketer with a specialization in finance and business. As a CPA with experience in the industry, she’s able to provide unique insight into various monetary, financial and economic topics. When Veronica isn’t writing, you can find her watching the latest films!
Are realtors too valuable to be disrupted by technology?
Tens of billions of venture capital dollars go into proptech every year. But realtors remain critical middlemen for most consumers. Is this just the way it will always be? Here’s a look at how tech is changing residential real estate – and how it’s not.
“Real estate is the only mammoth-size market remaining in which middlemen (brokers/agents) have complete control of the process. The operative members of the transaction (buyers/sellers) are withheld from direct communication and limited in resources and transparency. They are at the mercy of the middlemen in a world where other industries are constantly being refreshed, redesigned, and automated.”
Still, Canadian (and American) realtors are, to date, disruption resistant. Canadian realtors extract billions in value every year for their work. This is just how real estate works in this country, but it is kind of odd. Especially because Canada’s housing crisis is exactly that: a crisis.
Canada needs to build 3.5 million extra homes by 2030 to ensure affordable housing for everyone living in the country. That’s on top of the expected build out of 2.3 million homes that are currently planned.
This housing gap means some version of the following story is happening in Canada basically every single week:
A seller wants to put their home on the market. They sign with a realtor who shares data on how to price the property, photographs it, lists it on MLS and advertises it. Depending on the seller, the realtor may provide significant guidance on the process of selling a home. People tend to get nervous when they’re selling their single biggest asset.
Still, the whole process can be over in a matter of weeks — a win for sellers, presumably. Well, sort of.
This process can be efficient in a hot market, but it also leaves many sellers with an odd taste in their mouths as they watch their realtor and their buyer’s realtor walk away with commissions of thousands, if not tens of thousands, of their dollars.
So, why hasn’t tech made more headway in bleeding out these seemingly unnecessary costs for buyers and sellers?
The investment is there. But so are the realtors. So, what changes are happening?
Proptech platforms are creating more informed buyers and sellers
Consumers are seeing the results of the money that has poured into proptech over the last decade. During the home-buying frenzy that followed a certain pandemic, many buyers toured properties virtually, and made buying decisions without ever being inside the place they’d soon call home.
But that’s just the latest evolution of real estate technology for consumers. Much of the first wave of proptech has already become second nature for many of us. We all have access to powerful, data-driven tools and platforms to aid us when it’s time to buy or sell.
Just a few examples:
Zillow is a one-stop digital marketplace that serves home buyers and sellers, as well as renters and landlords. It goes well beyond MLS, with deep resources and functionality like property valuation estimates. It’s the largest real estate website in the U.S. with over 60 million monthly views – and it’s increasingly popular in Canada.
Redfin is a real estate brokerage that offers lower than standard brokerage fees for its agents to sell residential homes. The company operates in both Canada and the U.S.
Trulia is similar to Zillow but offers additional functionality like crime maps by area, neighborhood profiles, and estimated monthly property upkeep costs. Trulia was acquired by Zillow in 2014 but continues to run as a separate platform.
Bōde is a Canadian platform that enables sellers to list their properties for free. Then they market the listing on platforms like Zillow and MLS. When a buyer and seller connect, Bōde facilitates the sale of the home and charges a 1% fee (up to a maximum of $10,000) on the final sale price. No realtor is involved.
While consumers love platforms like these and are doing more research on their own, they still gravitate to realtors when it comes time to sell or buy. A recent CBC article noted that:
“While specific numbers are hard to come by, all indications suggest that private sales make up a tiny sliver of overall real estate deals in Canada. For example, For Sale By Owner recently had some 116 listings in all of Ontario, while some mid-sized cities in the province showed more than 1,000 on MLS.”
Change is coming for everyone – from buyers to sellers to realtors
Still, the forecasts suggest this initial wave of proptech innovation may lead to more significant changes in the years to come.
It’s clear that the rate of automation isn’t exactly slowing down.
Blockchain, the distributed ledger that promises to destroy unnecessary middlemen across industries, offers the potential ability to reduce the need for realtors, through its ability to protect against fraudulent activity through decentralized smart contracts.
But widespread adoption of blockchain technology hasn’t happened in any major industry, much less a massive asset class like real estate. And blockchain alone doesn’t eliminate the need for home buyers and sellers to get expert counsel from someone during a transaction.
And AI has promise and potential, sure. It can already do things with data that no human can. But buyers and sellers seem to consistently value empathy, human interaction, negotiation skills, and a realtor’s personalized knowledge of a community or property type. This is especially true when someone is making the life-altering choice to buy or sell a house. If it was your house, would you want the robot or the person?
So far, most Canadians are choosing the person. (The same is even true with another major life purchase, as we’ve recently reported.)
But there are more changes afoot.
Think back to that theoretical seller that sees their house sold in days and in return sacrifices tens of thousands of dollars in commissions. Is that a good deal for them? Maybe not.
That insight is at the root of Bid My Listing, a new startup from entrepreneur Matt Proman and real estate bigwig Josh Altman.
Bid My Listing enables sellers to solicit bids from realtors to list their house. As Proman told Entrepreneur.com:
“I had a lot of agents knocking on my door, leaving their business cards that they wanted to represent me in the transaction.”
Proman thought his Long Island home would move quickly and signed a six-month exclusive listing agreement with an agent. “I waited and waited and waited,” he said. “And I watched two other houses sell on my block.”
“I said, ‘I will never, for any of my other houses, give my listing away for free. The next time the agents have to put their money where their mouth is and have skin in the game.
So, while realtors may exist long into Canada’s real estate future, tech may eventually create major changes in their roles and how they’re compensated. They’re likely to find themselves having to adapt to a changing landscape where buyers and sellers want more value for the commissions they pay on a real estate transaction.
HBR recently released a report (sponsored by Red Hat as part of The Enterprisers Project), on the changing roles and landscapes of Chief Information Officers (CIOs) leading organizations through digital transformation.
The goal? Resilience.
Specifically, resilience in an organization’s people, business processes, and tech infrastructure.
But don’t get too caught up in the tech just yet. As UC Dublin business professor Joe Peppard is quoted in the report, “digital transformation is less a technology challenge and more a leadership one.”
HBR shares how CIOs can step up to the plate with leadership that fosters resilience amidst digital transformation:
Adaptability for CIOs and the organizations they lead
Digital transformation is a response to change, whether that change is innovation, customer demands, or industry trends. Today’s CIO must prepare their organizations to adapt to those changes, specifically:
Adapt new processes to speed up product development
Collaborate to create new business models
Respond faster to client demands
Experiment and pivot quickly
Attract and retain IT talent
To achieve all that, the role of CIO has quickly expanded its job duties. Indeed, 89% of CIOs feel their role has become “more important,” the report found, while 88% agree their role is the most “critical component” of their organization’s sustenance.
What do these expanded duties look like, apart from leading adaptable organizations? The CIO is an educator, coach, strategic adviser, entrepreneur, relationship builder, and change agent. HBR even includes “evangelist” in the mix.
Managing expectations, relationships, and talent
Communication and relationship building are increasingly important, even in a tech-dominated industry. HBR cites an IDC statement that CIOs will even out inflation, shortages, and other economic changes through negotiations and relationship building.
Of course, that communication is vital internally as well. CIOs need to lead staff, managers, and executives through pivoting plans, unpredictable results, and changing expectations. How? Through empathy, a vital component in supporting a successful organization and successful professionals within one. This also includes fostering safety, diversity, personal growth, inclusion, and autonomy for experimentation, and learning from failures.
Finally, there comes the talent — starting at recruitment, all the way to career development and flexible work arrangements for IT staff.
Making tech more agile
CIOs can’t do this on their own. However, they can embrace transformation tools and support their organization using them. HBR cites a PwC study on strategies for adapting to new tech tools, including:
Making an IT strategy more agile
Using infrastructure investment to move to the cloud
Leveraging data and analytics to inform strategic decisions
CIOs aren’t just responsible for securing the new tech. They also need to strategically and operationally decide how to best harness each tech’s capabilities. The answer comes from the entire organization, as business operations and IT become unsiloed to support better collaboration.
Veronica Ott is a freelance writer and digital marketer with a specialization in finance and business. As a CPA with experience in the industry, she’s able to provide unique insight into various monetary, financial and economic topics. When Veronica isn’t writing, you can find her watching the latest films!