Home Conference Speakers Erik Rabasca, Vice President, Converseon
Erik Rabasca, Vice President, Converseon
Erik Rabasca ConverseonErik recently joined Converseon as Vice President from PHD, an Omnicom Company. At PHD, Erik created the US Social Media practice, guiding all efforts on listening and measurement, brand community building, blog/social network outreach efforts and evaluation of new and emerging platforms.  He has served on the drafting committee of WOMMA’s Influencer Council in 2008.  Prior to PHD, Erik was a recording and touring musician, a media research consultant, a Nielsen Media Research employee and a stockbroker. 
 
twitter linked in facebook
social media space ecademy
Bookmark and Share

Gold Sponsor

 

linkedin

omnifuse-web

 

 

 

lewispr

 

 

 

qinteractive

 

 

 

 

Silver Sponsors

levick-web

converseon

 

 

 

sayitsocial

 

 

 

pokenzoologo

eventpartner

 

 

 

ecademy

 

 

 

netbiscuits

 

 

 

rockyoulogo

 

Sponsors

boonex

 

 

 

eventscope

 

 

 

chatter

 

 

 

razorfish

 

 

 

Exhibitors

 

sayitsocial

 

 

 

omnifuse

 

 

 

eventpartner

 

 

 

netbiscuits

 

 

 

webmasterfm

 

 

 

razorfish

 

 

 

partnerpedia

 

 

 

DMAnc

 

 

 

peanutlabslogosmall2

qinteractive

 

 

 

lewispr

 

 

 

ccbetty_logo

rockyoulogo

marketingprofslogo

Facebook Developer Garage

Upcoming Events

pr-125x125

 

 

 

 

 

Social Networking World Forum - London

 

 

 

 

 

corporate 125x125

 

 

 

 

 

pol-125x125-

 

 

 

 

 



Conference Streams

cloud-stream

Brochure

BrochureScreenImage

Supporters

Media Supporters

Media Supporters











Media Partners


"Over 800 million people worldwide will be participating in a social network via their mobile phones by 2012, up from 82 million in 2007." eMarketer

 

"Around 812,000 Britons each month, or 1.7% of all UK mobile subscribers, visited a social networking website using their mobile during the first quarter of 2008." Nielsen Media Research

 

"Revenues from social networking, dating and personal content delivery services will increase from $572m in 2007 to more than $5.7bn in 2012, with social networking accounting for 50% of the total by the end of the forecast period." Juniper Research