The five-day conference at the Moscone Center in San Francisco starts on May 14 and boasts a three-hour keynote speech. There are 120 separate Android and Chrome sessions, but what will the big announcement be?
Sarah Robb O'Hagan, Gatorade president, North America, and global chief marketing officer, sports nutrition, for PepsiCo, talks with Fast Company about how an active imagination can help drive business growth.
KAYAK cofounder Paul English has a bold idea about what makes a team that can act fast on its creative ideas: All of its 150 employees are entrepreneurs.
"I wish someone had told me how important my sixth-grade science class was going to be in leadership," says Scott Roen, VP of Digital Marketing and Innovation at American Express--after all, it's the first place you learn to test a hypothesis.
There's a tendency for all of us to glorify the ideation process when in fact it's the reduction to practice that's perhaps more important, says Stephen Hoover, CEO of PARC, a Xerox company.
The word "innovation" has become so all-encompassing that it's lost some of its power, says Noah Brier, cofounder of Percolate. Here's a new way to think about it.
"When I first came across the idea of Generation Flux, I immediately said 'Finally, there's a name for people like me!,'" says Kate Brodock, CMO of Girls in Tech and Executive Director of Digital and Social Media for Syracuse University.
At our April 2011 Innovation Uncensored conference in New York, we brought together the people and companies who embrace innovation and want to transform the way we think about business.