London IA Mini Conference at The Guardian in April

 by Martin Belam, 13 March 2009

I'm delighted to be able to blog that on Monday 20th April, The Guardian will be hosting the first 'London IA Mini Conference' at our Kings Place office.

London Mini IA 09 logo

It is the start of what I hope will be a series of mini-conferences that allow our London IA group to share knowledge and experience in a setting that is less formal (and less expensive) than a big one day conference, but a little bit more structured than 'IA in the pub'.

The topics and presenters we have planned for April are:

I'll also be delivering a short spot on "What IA means for The Guardian" - a topic also briefly covered in a Q&A about my new job which I've done with Judith Townend at journalism.co.uk.

You can register via our London IA Ning community from noon today. In order to keep the level of personal interaction high there is a limit of 30 places, so try and register quickly if you want to go. It is free, but you need to be a member of the group to attend - so please sign up.

The format of the evening is to provide:

"5-10 min presentations intermixed with discussion on topics of current relevance to IA practice. Interaction is the key. Focuses on more participation and peer knowledge sharing than lectures from gurus."

Huge credit goes to Ken Beatson, who has been the driving force behind getting this organised, and the other sponsors alongside The Guardian - Aquent and Axure.

London Mini IA sponsor logos

London IA: Notes from the talks
Martin Belam, foreword by Ann McMeekin Carrier
London IA is a network of designers, information architects and thinkers. Since 2009 the group has been holding regular meetings featuring talks about UX, or of interest to UXers. This ebook is a compilation of my notes from those evenings, featuring talks by Andy Budd, Giles Colborne, Cennydd Bowles, Claire Rowland, Jason Mesut, Ben Bashford, Chris Heathcote, Dan Lockton, Relly Annett-Baker, Michael Blastland, Margaret Hanley and Richard Rutter amongst others. Topics covered range from ubicomp to psychology, from learning how to sketchnote to how to write a UX book, and how to improve digital design through diverse routes like copy-writing, designing for doubt, learning from music technology or taking care of typography.
London IA: Notes from the talks is available for Kindle for £2.47.

Keep up to date on my new blog