orange institute 11: when worlds combine
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Orange Institute 11
SILICON VALLEY & LOS ANGELES —SEP 30–OCT 4, 2
013
Orange Institute was founded in 2009 as a separate subsidiary of Orange with the goal of stimulating ongoing, independent and unbiased investigation of networked models of all kinds, helping its cross-industry community of innovation leaders better prepare for the rapid transformations that digital innovations are spawning in our networked society.
Orange Institute organizes intensive multi-day “immersion workshops” in key digital innovation clusters around the world, such as Silicon Valley. Participants in the sessions meet and connect with new people, ideas and products in places that are shaping and defining today’s and tomorrow’s digital landscape. The faculty of Orange Institute is global, multidisciplinary, and today comprises over 150 world-changing men and women, drawn from industry, academia, non-profits, and startup ecosystems of three continents.
An Orange Institute session is about learning dynamically in a non-linear world. It involves pragmatic altruism—the realization that it is in our organizations’ best interests to share dynamically between members and faculty in an intimate and open discussion, free from commercial agendas. Topics and themes chosen by Orange Institute are selected on the basis of their relevance to global companies, their emergent nature as new trends, and their potential to generate new insights for our members.
About Orange Institute
Orange Institute sessions immerse our community of innovation leaders from major companies and public institutions into the selected terroir so that conversations have a rich context unique to that location. Here, the 11th session of Orange Institute takes a moment to celebrate our return to Stanford University as part of the 2013 Silicon Valley segment of the program.
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SVLA
8Welcome Remarks
9Conversations About Disruption
10Narratives for the New Enterprise
12Almost Human: AI is the New UI
14When Newton met Von Neumann:
Remixing Atoms and Data
16Orange Fab Demo Day
18Twitter HQ Visit
19Youtube HQ Visit
20Aaron Levie
22Space is the Place:
Changing the World by Changing the Way We Work
24Streams of Dreams:
Premium Content via the Cloud
28From the Studio to the Data Center:
Digital Cinema in Action
30Digital First Studios:
The Rise of Entertainment Platforms
32The Next 100 Years:
Hollywood’s Digital Century
34Chateau Marmont
36From Sand to Silicon: Where LA
Startup Culture is Going
38The Story is Changing:
New Trends, New Audiences for Narrative
40Devoe House
42Creating New Worlds:
Immersive Content via New Technology
44Speakers
46Participants
48Tweets & Acknowledgments
33
For Orange Institute 11: When Worlds Combine, we were joined by members of the Orange Executive Committee, led by Orange CEO Stephane Richard, as well as members of the press, academia, and the Silicon Valley ecosystem.
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Hollywood is one of the world’s most iconic brands, and while it is much older, every day brings it closer to that other great California brand: Silicon Valley. Orange Institute #11 was conceived from the very beginning as an exploration of that connection—or as we call it, this “combination”—between a major capital of creatives and the world capital of technology. We are pleased to bring you this report—our synthesis of the most ambitious and well-attended session of Orange Institute since its inception in 2009.
To tell the story of how story-telling is changing we took the largest and most diverse group of members ever across a week-long journey through two cities, over 12 different venues including Twitter, YouTube, and two major studio lots to converse with over 40 experts in the Valley and Los Angeles. Along the way we heard from three of the most important VCs working in California today: Ben Horowitz, Mike Maples, and LA’s own Mark Suster, and arguably the most articulate founder from the consumerized IT sector, Aaron Levie.
The “we” I refer to included CMOs, CIOs, former faculty from previous sessions, and a generous representation of Orange’s own executive committee, led by Stephane Richard, CEO and Chairman of Orange. We want to thank Dominique Delport, Global Managing Director Havas Media Group and his team for supporting this collaborative learning expedition.
Understanding the magnitude of the reconfigurations sweeping businesses and players, and the roles we each play, is best done collaboratively, with different perspectives coming to bear. We feel honored to be able to operate the Orange Institute platform for this activity, which we call ‘pragmatic generosity’, since it benefits us all.
The story of a combinatorial wave sweeping over creative and technical industries is one that will be playing out inside our companies and between them in the months and years to come. We who attended Orange Institute #11 know that now!
The Orange Institute journey will continue. We are excited with the prospect of putting together new learning and sharing expeditions, so that we can sustain our propensity and disposition to be surprised and inspired. Together.
There is no limit to constructive curiosity.
With gratitude for your participation,
Georges Nahon President, Orange Institute
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Orange Silicon Valley60 Spear St. San Francisco, CA
Autodesk1 Market St. San Francisco, CA
Twitter1355 Market St. San Francisco, CA
SV
Youtube901 Cherry Ave.San Bruno, CA
Stanford Faculty Club439 Lagunita Dr.Stanford, CA
NVidia2701 San Tomas Expy.Santa Clara, CA
A methodical but passionate
investor, MIKE MAPLES of Floodgate
discusses ‘Thunder Lizards’.
MIKE MAPLES
Managing Partner, Floodgate
Exponential growth started with Moore’s law in the Valley, but Mike Maples is driving it deep into his investment thesis, and challenging large companies to shift from linear to exponential thinking as well. Even more macro: Maples posits that true capitalism and competition are opposites, and that Jerry’s (Garcia) Law of Capitalism applies to all disruptors: ‘don’t be the best, be the only.’
“ Failure is not a sin; not trying for the big idea is the sin. ”—Mike Maples
Conversations About Disruption
Disruption is not a stroke of genius, but a concerted effort to displace incumbents with entrenched ways of doing things. Savvy investors have rules and criteria for picking startups who do this: we’ll talk to some of the
Valley’s best-known VCs who fund disruptor to make out-sized returns.
Orange Silicon Valley8
Orange CEO Stéphane Richard lays out a roadmap for the week ahead: noting that networks are engineered for combining data, video and content of all kinds, he points to a larger combination of creative talents and technical wizardry. These new layers are being built on a tower called the SMAC Stack (Social, Mobile, Analytics, and Cloud). This stack is leveling barriers to entry and disrupting incumbents on both sides of the network/content divide, and Stephane reminds us that the power of Institute is the collaborative learning that can happen when individuals from many organizations come together to understand what’s next.
Welcome to Orange Institute
Orange Silicon Valley9
ELISSA FINK helps us move from
presentation to persuasion.
SANJAY SHOLAKIA asserts CMOs
“own the growth agenda”.
JEREMY HOWARD is a data scientist
who manages a hub for 100,000
other like-minded geeks.
SANJAY DHOKLA
Chief Marketing Officer, Marketo.
The Social Marketer par excellence, Sanjay Dholakia exhorts the group of marketers to ‘own the growth agenda.’ His perspective is anticipatory and data-driven: “70% of every buying process is done before buyer even talks to a brand or company,” and the inevitable logic is “if you wait, you’ve lost.” The use of content by brands, by its customers, to engage continuously, is the laser focus of this leading-edge practitioner.
ELISSA FINK
Chief Marketing Officer, Tableau
Tableau Software, another successful IPO in the enterprise space, is all about helping people see and understand their data. This is a huge opportunity – as big as the decades-long footprint of Excel itself, and since it involves visual processing, occupies 70% of our brain function.
JEREMY HOWARD
President & Chief Scientist, Kaggle
Machine learning, around since 1954, is coming into its own, with proof-points in autonomous driving, document translation, generation of written text from data, and winning game shows against humans. Kaggle is a hub for 100,000 data scientists, who have common traits: creativity, curiosity, tenacity, solid programming skills. Howard, himself a data scientist, believes deeply in the exponential march of the machines: sorry, but “humans are not improving anything exponentially.”“ If you tell me, it’s an
essay, if you show me, it’s a story. ”—Elissa Fink
Narratives for the New Enterprise
Lessons from the Consumer Web have changed the $350 Bn Enterprise Software business forever. The ‘consumerization of IT’ has exploded in the past few years to create new enterprise service providers who
have leveraged Big Data and ‘push-button’ interfaces into healthy IPOs and market caps.
Orange Silicon Valley10
“What I do, and what I express
interest in, is way more important
than who I am.” —Sanjay Dholakia
Orange Silicon Valley11
Tempo AI’s DONNEAU-GOLENCER and
co-founder RAJ SINGH are former
SRI researchers on a spin-out.
MAURICE PATEL takes us behind the
scenes of everything.
SHAI LEIB is leading the way
forward to a Siri-like experience
for the Internet of Things.
MAURICE PATEL
Product Marketing Manager, Autodesk
Our host from Autodesk, Maurice Patel is at home in the world of story-telling in all its forms: videogames are a special focus. We visit the interior of the human brain and Maurice helps us understand how it recoils from an ‘Uncanny Valley’ when it becomes disturbingly close to human. We learn tricks of the trade, and understand that as technology proceeds exponentially, it is never quite enough.
THIERRY DONNEAU-GOLENCER
Co-Founder, Tempo AI
Personal assistants are defined by SRI visionary Norm Winarsky as ‘software that learns and completes tasks for you’—Thierry has worked at SRI and carries the knowledge of what’s to come to mobile platforms. He sees mobiles becoming anticipatory, able to predict what we need next, and he calls this modality the ‘smart’ layer. Sensors + Data + AI in the smartphone will drive this new experience, and Tempo is using the calendar as the entry-point, because it embodies our intent.
SHAI LEIB
Founder/CEO, Ask Ziggy
Shai is a one-man army, up against scores of well-financed speech teams at Apple and Google, with a focus on speech recognition in context. He also is fanatical about the user experience, and AI’s ability to “listen, and land you there” in a way that involves zero learning curve. Shai’s ambitions are exponential, and to get there he has created a framework that allows any developer to tap into the language assets needed to speech-enable apps without being a domain expert.
Almost Human: AI is the New UI
Artifical Intelligence/Machine learning + APIs + sensors/devices + speech recognition is the new math for crafting user experiences that mimic the way humans interact with each other. Virtual Personal Assistants and hi-tech
wearables are just two new product categories springing to life from this trend: ‘talk to me’ is the new ‘click here’.
12Autodesk Gallery
“A big part of our ability to communicate is empathy.”
—Maurice Patel
“ To be conversational doesn’t really take that much effort.”
—Shai Leib
13Autodesk Gallery
CEO DAVE KENNEY agrees that space
is the very best vantage point for
weather observations.
Intel’s JENNIFER HEALEY focuses
on how we experience a world
infused and augmented by data.
PETER PLATZER of Nanosatisfi
is putting Silicon Valley models
into space.
JENNIFER HEALEY
Research Scientist, Intel
Intel IXR is about Interaction and Experience Research, and Jennifer’s focus on the automotive industry is called ‘Where the Data Hits the Road’—apt given the car as a collection of sensors and connectivity. Jennifer is a design researcher and studies how people drive, using all those sensors to collect data, analyze it, and envision a world where that data is shared with other cars, and the infrastructure around them. Car as Data, Infrastructure as Context, dynamically made available to the car, for dynamic traffic rules, parking reservations, and autonomous driving.
DAVE KENNEY
Chairman and CEO, Weather Company
As the CEO of the Weather Company, Kenney is perfectly entitled to discuss “Acts of God, Data of Man”—to which we could append, ‘Monetization by Advertisers.’ It turns out Kenney’s company is constantly finding new ways to monetize weather data—not just any data, but the freshest, most localized, annotated global weather data anywhere. Selling not just space, but non-media plays as well: airline companies getting almost-realtime data about turbulence. Behind it all, the ‘Acts of Man:’ driving climate change in a way that makes this product ever more valuable.
PETER PLATZER
Founder/CEO, Nanosatisfi
From the Sputnik to Kickstarter: Peter has moved from rocket scientist for NASA to entrepreneur crowdfunding the PC’s of space travel: the Mooresian transition from mainframe to PC is happening now with space technology. Business models for Space are changing as well: peer-to-peer, open source, a hacking intent that leads to high school science classes doing experiments in space. The inspirational payload is way above the miniaturized physical platform. We are energized by the closing vision of Big Data in Space, available to us all.
When Newton met Von Neumann:
Algorithmic intervention into the physical and built world is dragging us quickly to the Internet of Things (IoT). We present three wildly eclectic talks on how we connect objects—even natural
phenomena—with data in new ways.
Remixing Atoms and Data
14Autodesk Gallery
“I want to die on Mars,
just not on impact.”—Elon Musk on
space travel
“ The freshest data makes the difference. ”
—Jennifer Healey
15Autodesk Gallery
Ben Horowitz [VC, Andreessen-Horowitz]Stéphane Richard [CEO, Orange]
Richard Waters [West Coast Editor, Financial Times]
Orange Fab Demo Day
The first of several soirees. This evening is a big one, combining the delegates with 40+ Silicon Valley friends of Orange, one CEO (Stéphane Richard), one world-class VC (Ben Horowitz of Andreessen-Horowitz),
six startups, and the one accelerator that made all of this happen: Orange Fab. The evening starts with a conversation moderated by Financial Times’ Richard Waters between Stéphane Richard and Ben Horowitz:
on some things they disagree (Ballmer’s Microsoft legacy), on others they align (remuneration of ISPs for traffic-driven Capex). Then the six startups pitch, then the conversations continue. Fade to smiles.
Orange Silicon Valley16
Orange Silicon Valley17
Twitter HQ Visit
As President of Revenue, Adam Bain has responsibility for a company on the eve of an IPO to generate revenue sufficient to pay for more than 2,000 employees in offices around the world. While retaining a
culture that wants to build a company “in a way that makes us proud”—and a product that is live, public and conversational. The focus is on Everyday, Events, and TV: all a succession of moments, and a brand mandate to #OwnTheMoment. Jean-Philippe Maheu is a data scientist focused on the complex mesh of hashtags and
TV shows, sentiment, and intent. Using gorgeous data viz, we see how Twitter becomes a realtime global water-cooler, spreading word of mouth about TV shows—and the ads that come with them—in patterns we
are just starting to understand.
“ Smart marketers are planning for Moments in advance.”—Adam Bain
18Twitter Headquarters
A Visit with YouTube
Tom has a laser focus on the creators of YouTube who bring 1 billion visitors a month, consuming 6 billion hours of video. The energy and money that goes into helping ‘channelize’ this oceanic creativity, and provides
a mix of content rights, social media, and analytics tools to marry content with brands for ad-based and subscription monetization models – YouTube is a brand’s video publishing platform, either direct or with others.
“ In this world there are no gatekeepers, now it’s a world of abundance vs a world of scarcity.” —Tom Pickett
19YouTube Headquarters
AARON LEVIE, Co-Founder & CEO
of Box.com, wants to be loved
equally by users and by IT.
AARON LEVIE
Co-Founder & CEO of Box.com
Aaron the CEO comes to the session ready to do business—and explain how the world has changed. From hierarchies to networks driven by cloud and mobile, leadership, decision-making, and ideation go to a continuously-shared model. His confidence is tied to a sense of ‘incredible change’ that comes from combining the instincts of a consumer company and the mindset and skills of enterprise software. Aaron blends product vision, market vision, and motivation in a single narrative that many members will recall as one of the best talks of the week.
Conversation with Aaron Levie
The dynamic co-founder of Box.com is an outspoken advocate for organizational change and enterprise evolution. In this free-ranging talk, Levie hits on the changes that are driving incumbents to adapt or be left behind.
A cloud service itself, Box uses 25 different cloud services to run its business. —Aaron Levie
20Stanford University Faculty Club
“ An outside company who sees a new way of doing something is not encumbered by the legacy business model that doesn’t allow them to make that move.”—Aaron Levie
21Stanford University Faculty Club
DENISE CHERRY’S firm has designed
offices for Facebook, Evernote,
Giant Pixel, Cisco, among others.JOHN HAGEL continues to
inspire Institute sessions with
insights on what makes us tick.
CHRIS THIERFELDER: a historian
of collective innovation.
JOHN HAGEL
Deloitte Center for the Edge
Stories are different from Narratives. Stories are about Me, and they end; Narratives are about Us—and they can drive powerful engagement in an open-ended way. Narratives have been and continue to be used to instill fear by focusing on threats. Opportunity-based narratives are even more powerful and instill passion. John challenges us to think about our own narrative, and that of our organization. Most exciting of all, what can happen when narratives combine?
CHRIS THIERFELDER
Expert in Design and Development of Medical Technologies, XPrize Foundation
In an inspirational talk that put the ‘X’ in eXponential, Chris helped us reconnect to a theme that had been opened by Jeremy Howard from Kaggle: new models of collective innovation were restructuring the hierarchical relations of domain expertise. He showed how contests have always driven this restructuring: a candymaker invented a way to preserve food for Napoleon’s army, a clockmaker figured out the cartographic feature of longitude. XPrize, which precedes Kaggle by a decade, has an exponential effect on corporate R&D. Consider the $10 million raised in prize money for a reusable rocket: over $100 million was collectively spent by competitors, and a market space emerged from nothing to $1.5 billion. A gold-mining company offered $500K for clues to new deposits – it yielded $6 billion in return.
DENISE CHERRY
Principal, Studio O+A
Denise starts by asking what should an office be today? There is no one thing—the answer is multiple things. Receptionists double as barristas, stairs are briefing platforms, and meeting spaces. Welcome to the multi-functional office space that reflects the way we work today: collaboratively, non-hierarchically. In a neat tie-back to John Hagel, Denise describes office space as a part of the company’s narrative.
Space is the Place:
Both physically and operationally, new models for the way we work are constantly being born in Silicon Valley. Everything from physical design of the workplace, to the way we design questions, to the way we look at data
is up for reconfiguration.
Changing the World by Changing the Way We Work
22Stanford University Faculty Club
“ The challenge of most businesses is that they haven’t even begun to think about their narrative …but they all have one whether they know it or not.”—John Hagel
23Stanford University Faculty Club
PHIL EISLER runs both the cloud
business and consumer devices
that fill ‘gaps in the ecosystem.’
PHIL EISLER
GM, GeForce GRID Cloud Gaming, NVida
Phil Eisler wants to rip the screen from your computer, put your computer in the cloud, and project the bits onto any screen, anywhere. In what could be a prequel to the last session at Oblong, NVidia’s cloud chief explains how the rise of bandwidth is virtualizing hardware—everything from super-expensive workstations to consumer set-top boxes—and liberating pixels.
Streams of Dreams:
Insight into how creatives and geeks collaborate in Silicon Valley is gained by looking at advances in digital distribution of premium content. Give artists and designers direct access to distribution pipes, add algorithmic
recommendations, and watch digital and artistic worlds combine.
“ Once you separate the screen from your computer it changes the business models of what can be done. ”—Phil Eisler
Trends in App Streaming
24NVidia
“ We are approaching a world where 1 billion citizens have at least 10 Mbs of connectivity. ”—Phil Eisler
25NVidia
MTI Film1016 N Sycamore Ave.Los Angeles, CA
Warner Studios3400 Riverside Dr.Burbank, CA
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science8949 Wilshire Blvd.Beverly Hills, CA
Chateau Marmont8221 Sunset Blvd.West Hollywood, CA
General Assembly1520 2nd St.Santa Monica, CA
Devoe House1870 Sunset Plaza Dr.Los Angeles, CA
Fox Studios10201 W Pico Blvd.Los Angeles, CA
Oblong Industries923 E 3rd St.Los Angeles, CA
LA
JOHN STEVENS has seen the
art and science of post-
production evolve over four
decades to a point where his
digital expertise is sought by
vendors as well as artists.
DAVE MCCLURE runs
product for MTI, which
builds its own technology
to support its services,
and then shares its
solutions with the industry.
JOHN STEVENS
VP Engineering, MTI
We start in the basement, maybe not literally, but the data centers that represent how film is managed and massaged could be anywhere. MTI Film has evolved from a film restoration specialist to ‘acquisition’—the facility where dailies are uploaded from a bewildering array of digital cameras in any number of formats—all of them involving very, very large files. This is the beginning of an increasingly data-driven post-production world where the computing and storage needs of Hollywood start to look like an exercise in high-performance computing not unlike Wall Street’s High-Frequency Trading domain we studied back in IO #9. Indeed MTI is both a services company and a software company, selling the solutions it creates for itself to others.
DAVE MCCLURE
VP Product Development, MTI
David McClure is a craftsman that has watched the art of making film and television evolve into a pure digital experience. Dave’s story is a narrative that connects mechanical editing reels used to splice actual rolls of film to today’s scenario, where pixels pour out of broadband pipes at the end of each day’s shooting in a growing array of different file formats. His job is to help clients ride this never-ending cascade of technology evolution.
From the Studio to the Data Center:
Post-production in the movie business has always pushed the technology envelope, from high-speed pipes to massive image processing. Today’s post-production house resembles a modern high-performance computing
platform. We’ll see one in action.
Digital Cinema in Action
28MTI Film
29MTI Film
JOHNNY SHIN’S roster of 1500
celebrities is available and
already ranked using Big Data.EZRA COOPERSTEIN started
home video in 1984 with a
Fisher-Price child’s camera
BRIAN AHLUND’S company is
funded by William Morris Endeavor
Digital First Studios:
Behold the startups that are Digital Natives, born as digital, and restructuring audience in a social age for new paths to markets for visual and musical entertainment.
The Rise of Entertainment Platforms
EZRA COOPERSTEIN
COO, Fullscreen
Ezra Cooperstein’s company lives entirely on YouTube—and generates over 2 billion views a month. This is the new wave of empowered creators, operating from anywhere – especially from places where board culture and youth prevail—in other words, not Hollywood. This globalized audience is unpredictable, and voracious: a dancing Asian man gets 1.7 billion views, changing what we think of as a ‘publisher’ or a ‘studio’ forever.
BRIAN WAHLUND
CSO, Jingle Punks
Like the other companies in this session JinglePunks is about bringing Big Data to its domain—in this case music. The artist-led company has used machine learning and metadata to classify music in novel ways— making it more searchable for advertisers, creators, and anybody who wants to experience and distribute music as part of an ad, movie, or other work.
JOHNNY SHIN
VP, Digital Media & Partnerships, Ad.ly
The business of celebrity endorsements is changing exponentially thanks to social media. Ad.ly, funded by noted LA investor Mark Suster, is in the heart of this transformation, which can be realtime, and highly targeted. Analytics (again) power a database matching messages with celebrities and their audiences, optimizing yield. No more hope-it-works multi-year, multi-million dollar contracts—now putting a famous name next to your product is a simple text away.
30Academy of Motion Picture
“ Hollywood can now be everywhere.”—Ezra Cooperstein
31Academy of Motion Picture
The Next 100 Years: Hollywood’s Digital Century
The film industry is a 100-year old institution ripe for disruption. Digital distribution to multiple devices, social media, and the economics of big-budget film-making are all on the agenda as studios embrace Digital as the
gateway to the next 100 years.
“ If your program is half as good as it looks, you’re going to have a very interesting week. ”—Jim Wuthridge’s commentary on Orange Institute program for the week.
John Attanasio (VP, Global
Product Marketing, WBHE)
Michael Puopolo (VP,
Research, Int’l TV Distribution)
Julian Lai-Hung (VP, Digital
Distribution, International, WBHE)
Jim Wuthridge, President of
the Americas, Warner Brothers
32Warner Brothers
The Next 100 Years: Hollywood’s Digital Century
In a truly memorable moment in Orange Institute history, we walk into an enormous screening room at Warner Bros to be greeted by Jim Wuthridge, President of the Americas, Warner Brothers. Home Entertainment. After his remarks, a panel of six studio executives from digital products, home sales, theatrical, TV, and distribution takes us into their inner chamber and exposes the changing shape of an industry. What’s changing? What isn’t: release windows, pricing of movie tickets, pricing the library, distribution of product, promotion, piracy issues, globalization—it is a stunning display of a management team engaged on many fronts, speaking openly and in a unified fashion. After this what can be left but to explore the richness of the assets in the form of the studio tour.
Justin Herz [SVP, Direct to
Consumer, WBHE and GM,
Advanced Digital Services]
Tom Molter (SVP,
Distribution at WBPI)
Daniel Ornstein
(Director, Global Business
Development, WBHE)
33Warner Brothers
Warner Brothers is celebrating its 90th anniversary and the 75th anniversary of the Wizard of Oz.
34Warner Brothers
35Warner Brothers
ROB FRIEDMAN, Co-Chairman of
Lionsgate Motion Picture Group
in conversation with Dominique
Delport, Global Managing
Director, Havas Media Group
Rob Friedman is an innovator, and after taking Summit Entertainment into new business models, he and his partners sold to Lionsgate in a transformative deal that saw the market cap of Lionsgate double in less than a year. Rob and Dominique Delport cover a diverse set of topics, all illuminating different aspects of the movie and television business. It is a mosaic of risk-taking and judgments about what people want, and is also an education on how to take properties from one medium, like books, to film and TV in market segments such as Young Adult. Rob is passionate about content, about stories, and when he talks about upcoming properties such as next spring’s ‘Divergent’, it is infectious: by the time Rob and Dominique shake hands we all have the fever.
In a kind of dream scenario, we have a Hollywood studio mogul interviewed by one of Europe’s leading media executives, himself an accomplished journalist. In a major supporting role is the set the
intimate Bar at Chateau Marmont.
Conversation with Rob FriedmanBy Dominique Delport, CEO, Havas Media Group
“ We have now achieved critical mass and leveled the competitive playing field. ”—Patrick Wachsberger, co-chair, Lionsgate Motion Picture Group
Chateau Marmont36
Lionsgate’s The Twilight Saga has grossed more than $3.3 billion at the worldwide box office.
Chateau Marmont37
Chateau MarmontF. Scott Fitzgerald, Dorothy Parker, Hunter S. Thompson, Bruce Weber, Helmut Newton, Tim Burton, Sofia Coppola, James Franco, and…Orange Institute. What do they have
in common? Moments of insight and joy inside the hallowed walls of Chateau Marmont. Pictured above is the exterior of the Bar Marmont, site of the Delporte interview with Rob
Friedman; this structure stands next to the actual hotel and restaurant, pictured on the facing pages. Time for your close-up…
Chateau Marmont39
JAMES SIMINOFF, founder of
Doorbot, an Internet-of-Things
connected doorbell with
remote video.MARK SUSTER lived and worked
in France for 6 years
PETER PHAM logs about 100
flights a year between Silicon
Valley and LA.
From Sand to Silicon:
LA is a creative capital, and like New York the other capital on the other Coast, is jumping with tech startups flourishing in the intersection of entertainment and the Sharing Economy. We’ll engage with several investors
and startup incubators emblematic of this vibrant ecosystem.
Where LA Startup Culture is Going
MARK SUSTER
Partner, Upfront Ventures
Mark Suster is the most famous VC in LA, and he has is a global view on why Silicon Valley is no longer the center for the Internet. When innovation was about Web Infrastructure, the necessary skills were close to the Valley. But with a shift to “the layer above infrastructure”—one where the 3 C’s: Content, Commerce, Communication, live in other places, the genie is out of the bottle. It is an inspiring talk by a VC very familiar with doing business in France, and very critical about regulatory and legal barriers there.
PETER PHAM
Co-founder & Partner, Science
Science is a new model for accelerators, building its owned & operated proprietary analytics and acquisitions infrastructure to startups it has invested in and in many cases own outright. In this model, Founders are valued employees, and exits are spin outs. Like James Siminoff, Peter works in LA but gets his funds in SV—he travels to Silicon Valley once a week, 50 X a year.
JAMES SIMINOFF
Chief Inventor, Edison Jr
James Siminoff is a serial entrepreneur who, like Mark Suster, was brought to LA based on his spouse’s situation. He speaks at length about the contrast between a more self-reliant LA startup scene versus the hothouse of Silicon Valley. It is clear he’s not going back north, except for frequent runs to meet with investors: ‘we build companies here in LA; we fund them from Silicon Valley.’
40General Assembly
“What California has is an acceptance of failure. If you
don’t accept failure as a society, no one wants to try anything.”
—Mark Suster
41General Assembly
HARDIE TANKERSLEY at Fox Broadcasting
hosted Institute at the Fox lot.
DANIEL SOLNICKI speaks
from a wealth of experience
with international markets.
OLIVER LUCKETT’S company manufactures
celebrities on the Social Web.
DOUG VAN PRAET is the author
of: “Unconscious Branding”
The Story is Changing:
From insights into neuroscience of storytelling, to the globalization of stories in the digital/social sphere, to the world’s theatrical distribution channels, insights into storytelling and its impact on us are coming fast and furious.
This session will feature an eclectic mix of theory and practice, on how the digital global village is transforming how we share stories.
New Trends, New Audiences for Narrative
HARDIE TANKERSLEY
VP Digital Product, Fox Broadcasting
Hardie is a member of the digital arm of Hollywood, focused on a form that didn’t exist 10 years ago: apps for TV shows. He articulates the open questions before us: can apps be a competitive advantage? Can it be a business? How do we market it? Fox is all in – about half of their shows have apps, each category with different requirements. Want to know which is the most suitable? Reality shows.
OLIVER LUCKETT
Founder & CEO, The Audience
His 2-year old company is funded by Sean Parker and Ari Emmanuel, and has 155 employees reinventing what buzz looks like. Luckett is a renaissance man, a life-scientist turned social media impresario with real-time analytics and a keen ear for the authentic. He sells out stadiums, makes huge box office purely online—he is leaving traditional media in the dust.
DANIEL SOLNICKI
Head of Worldwide Franchise Development, Dreamworks Animation
Daniel Solnicki has a global view of the entertainment industry, and it is fundamentally optimistic. Sober in his assessment, he sees lower barriers to entry and commoditization as downward levers. But his long view is bolstered by abundance: solve for piracy by abundant distribution at lower prices, creating demand. His message: there’s never been a better time to be a content creator, and consumption of your content just keeps growing.
DOUG VAN PRAET
Author
Doug has moved beyond the ad industry’s intuitive understanding of audience by grasping the emergent dashboard that cog-sci and neuroscience has offered us. His research has yielded seven steps to an integrated approach for marketers that are based on our understanding of how the human unconscious interacts with our more rational conscious mind. By uncovering how much of our (purchase) decisioning is unconscious, he reshapes our view of everything from consumer research to how we pitch.
42Fox Studio
“We are now starting to make a user experience out of a show, there’s an opportunity to make it
more interesting…”—Hardie Tankersley
43Fox Studio
Devoe HouseThe closing dinner is held at a magnificent private house perched atop the Hollywood Hills on
the site of the former residence of Marilyn Monroe. It’s time to celebrate a journey that has taken us from Silicon Valley to Hollywood, or what some of us are starting to call “Siliwood.”
45Devoe House
JOHN UNDERKOFFLER worked
with Alex McDowell to create a
mockup of what became g-speak
for the movie Minority Report.ALEX MCDOWELL has built the
world’s largest indoors set ever
made for a movie (The Terminal).
Creating New Worlds:
In this penultimate session we visit the red-hot Arts District to apprehend the next stage of story-telling: immersive, experiential stories that are not told to us but happen to us. In this session Hollywood’s real-life technical wizards will preview how we will experience content in the digital landscape of creative and
emergent technology.
Immersive Content via New Technology
ALEX MCDOWELL
USC Media Lab
Alex was Spielberg’s choice to design Minority Report—but there was no script. Building a world instead of writing a script creates a non-linear space that redefines the idea of authorship – it is a collective process, like it was around the campfire. Think of it as ethnology of the future: extrapolating a world from a single artifact, like the letter ‘S’. His work with Intel and USC will be shared with the world soon, and we will marvel again.
JOHN UNDERKOFFLER
Chief Scientist, Oblong
John picks up from Alex by explaining how they took the idea and ‘hijacked Hollywood’—turning a special effect into an actual technology. In doing so, he is reclaiming the soul of the machine, rescuing it from the file metaphor and bringing it back into a humanistic mold. Again we have the idea of an assistant, ‘transducing human intent.’ But now, through the magic of Oblong’s technology, we are using the ‘delicious dexterity’ of our hands to command pixels liberated from a captive screen, making them able to appear anywhere.
46Oblong
“We are filling up our world with pixels.” —John Underkoffler
47Oblong
iO11 on Twitter
The scale of the When Worlds Combine
session makes our list of people to thank very long. We were faced with an unprecedented challenge: to create an entire week of pro-gramming in two different cities and indeed cultures, for a group of 50 people, many of whom were there for their first exposure to Orange Institute practices and perspectives. We are very pleased to say that with the help of the following people, we did it!
At the top of the list must be the personal participation by the CEO of Orange, Stephane Richard, who opened the week for us, as well as participated in sessions with several members of his executive team. We want to thank Beatrice Mandine, Delphine Ernotte-Cunci, Gervais Pellissier, Patrice Lambert, and most especially Elie Girard for their presence and energy. While not present, we know we benefitted greatly by the support provided by Jérémie Dutray and Vivek Badrinath in the preparations.
Our sincere thanks as well to our friends from Havas, led by Dominique Delport, whose presence, and support was always manifest in the person of Frederic Josue, always there with an answer or suggestion when we needed one. A most valuable resource in LA that we shared with Havas is Professor Jonathan Taplin at USC Annenberg’s Innovation Lab, Jon was unable to join us in the runtime, but was there at the very beginning and all along.
For the Bay Area sessions, we need to give a shout out to Yujin Chung at Andreessen-Horowitz for making the conversation with Ben Horowitz a reality—and to Richard Waters at the Financial Times for stepping up and moderating that session.
To our new friends at Autodesk, the cordial and capable Rama Dunayevich and Julia Papapietro McFarland, thanks for your hospitality and generosity, and for Maurice Patel.
To Adam Bain, JP Maheu, and Sierra
Lord at Twitter, we are doubly impressed by your hospitality at such a busy time for the company, #youareawesome.
Down the Peninsula to the team at YouTube, Jalil Chikhi and Jill Pervere, our appreciation for the Institute first-ever visit. In the “more than you’ll ever know department” Phil Eisler, Serge Lamond and the NVidia team not only gave a great talk but helped us shape the entire transition from the Bay Area to SoCal, so thanks for your excellent idea guys.
Before leaving the Bay Area, a special thanks to faculty who went above and beyond—John Hagel for his continuing contributions, David Kenney from Weather Company for making the journey and giving such as great talk. And talk about stepping up, a special thanks to Box.com co-founder Aaron Levie for joining us at Stanford.
In Los Angeles and Hollywood, the list gets longer. AT MTI, we want to thank
@OlivierFech Amazing presentation from @oblong_inc “minority report” is now (almost) real ! #io11
@OlivierFech “It’s amazing what you can learn when you pay attention” #io11
@flaburthe With #orangeinstitute listening to @alexmcdowell discovering how film design is becoming agile thanks to previz tech
@rduboff Unconscious Behaviorism. Instead of asking WHY. Ask HOW. Provocative rethinking of marketing. @DouglasVanPraet #orangeinstitute
@rduboff Siliwood tour continues with #orangeinstitute (@ Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences) http://4sq.com/15J1ynY
@SolineLedesert @bhorowitz speaks of cannibalization of yourself and self-disruption for large corp. at #orangeinstitute pic.twitter.com/m69xESLcqb
@jhagel “If you want to increase success, you need to double your error rate.” - @m2jr at #OrangeInstitute
“All good innovation seems really stupid at first. Innovation is never obvious” #orangeinstitute
@emmanuel_durand: very inspiring first talk from VC @m2jr at #orangeinstitute : “failure is not a sin: not going for the big idea is a sin.”
With #orangeinstitute listening to @alexmcdowell discovering how film design us becoming agile thanks to previz tech
Acknowledgments
48
John Stevens for making our first stop in LA seamless, fascinating, and informative. At Warner Brothers, Daniel Ornstein and Julie Demarigny provided us with amazing access and insights to the workings of a global content powerhouse. At Fox Television, Hardie Tankersley and Barbara Goodman made not just us but our entire guest faculty feel especially welcome.
In Santa Monica, we were fortunate to have early access to the brand-new General Assembly space at Sam Teller’s Launchpad LA, thanks to Sam, and Sarah Tilton of GA. For his continuing counsel throughout the build process—and for a great talk—thanks to Jamie Siminoff. Having Mark Suster, the spark behind the whole scene, really completed the picture, so thanks to Johnny Shin for his help there.
Several companies came to us through the unseen hand of WME’s Head of Digital, Chris Jacquemin—thank you for the
@emmanuel_durand According to @sdholakia, information is power, this power is shifting from compQanies to consumers #orangeinstitute pic.twitter.com/SGij3VmQR6
Tweeting from @twitter HQ is an experience per se :-) #OrangeInstitute 11 pic.twitter.com/7C8x0qRXbp
@domdelport #SILLIWOOD: @orange and @HavasMedia stay tuned while discovering the local #startups scene http://www.inc.com/ss/em-maier/los-angeles-10-hottest-start-ups#10 …
@orangeinstitute Combinatorial Enterprise w interviews by @jhagel and @haydn1701 here: http://bitly.com/17P9t1v we released @orangeinstitute #11 w/ @levie talk
Will human beings be able to face the flood of information and stay more intelligent than the machines? @orangeinstitute: Sylvie Joseph
@jtwinsor Great session @YouTube w/ @TomPickett. In a two-way realtime media world creative agencies need to restructure themselves to be more agile.
@jtwinsor Great conversation #mtifilm talking about the radical transition from film to digital. It’s a long way from here: pic.twitter.com/Cq3pRtTvhM
@jtwinsor Great prez from Fullscreen’s @ezracooper. Curating abundant content on YouTube. The next digital layer is being built. Kaboom.
@jtwinsor After listening to @Adly @Fullscreen and @jinglepunks you can hear the foundations of Hollywood and Madison Avenue crumble.
@jtwinsor @vintagejohnny @ezracooper looking forward to figuring out a way to work together.
@vintagejohnny @jtwinsor disruption at its best. looking forward to carving out new opps to work together w u and ur team @havasww nice preso @ezracooper!
Closing the loop at #OI11 last day. @oblong_inc paves the way from Hollywood to Silicon Valley. Great apotheosis and wonderful programming : Philippe J DEWOST @pdewost
vibrant creatives from JinglePunks and the magisterial Oliver Luckett of theAudience. Chris, you’re next! And to both Jon Taplin and most especially Auri Maruri at Lionsgate, thanks for helping us create a unique conversation and a memorable evening.
Orange Institute #11 showcased a number of firsts. Just as the nature of Institute continues to evolve, so does the team. New heights in member participation were achieved in Paris by our colleague Anne-Catherine Moreno, while here in SF we were aided by Shakira Mongul as producer, and Ava Alemazkoor from the Orange Fab team who pitched in as well.
This session also is a major milestone as we pause to bid best wishes for two long-time colleagues moving on to new challenges. In Paris, Romeo Machado has been with Institute since its earliest days, and we thank him on behalf of the many members who have become great friends
of Institute due in large part to Romeo. On behalf of all of us, we wish you the best success in your new job with Orange Horizon, Romeo.
Here in San Francisco Natalie Quizon, the co-curator and major creative force behind Orange Institute since its inception in 2009, is also moving on to new horizons. Natalie’s role in shaping the intellectual and design contours of the past 11 Institute sessions is manifested in so many aspects of the work: from the language and copy, to the print artifacts, to the scores of presenters that we have selected over the past four years. Natalie, we thank you for your craft and wish you great success, you will be missed.
As always, the success of each session ultimately is in the conversations that happen before, during, and after each session—these can only happen because of our members, old and new—we thank you for making this possible.
49
Adam Bain
President, Global Revenue, Twitter
Aaron Levie
Co-Founder & CEO, Box.com
Jim Wuthrich
President, The Ameri-cas, Warner Bros.
Jeremy Howard
President, Chief Scientist, Kaggle
Ezra Cooperstein
COO, FullScreen
Denise Cherry
Principal, Studio O+A
Chris Thierfelder
XPrize Foundation
Brian Wahlund
CSO, Jingle Punks
Alex McDowell
Creative Director, 5D Organization
John Stevens
VP Engineering, MTI
John Hagel
Deloitte Center for the Edge
Hardie Tankersley
VP Digital Product, Platforms, & Innovation, Fox BroadcastingDoug Van Praet
Author
Daniel Ornstein
Director, Business Development, Warner
James Siminoff
Chief Inventor, Edison Jr
Daniel Solnicki
Head, Worldwide Franchise Development, Dreamworks Animation
Ben Horowitz
Co-Founder, General Partner, Andreesen-Horowitz
Jennifer Healey
Research SCientist, Intel
Elissa Fink
CMO, Tableau
David Kenny
CEO, Weather Company
Speakers (from top to bottom)
50
Mike Maples
Founding Partner, Floodgate
Dave McClure
VP Product Development, MTI
Phil Eisler
GM, GeForce GRID Cloud Gaming, NVidia
Sanjay Dholakia
CMO, Marketo
Johnny Shin
VP, Digital Media & Partnerships, Ad.ly
Oliver Luckett
CEO, theAudience
Tom Pickett
Vice President, YouTube Content
Richard Waters
West Coast Editor, Financial Times
Stéphane Richard
CEO, Orange
Peter Pham
Co-Founder & Partner, Science
Shai Leib
Founder/CEO, Ask Ziggy
Rob Friedman
Co-Chairman, Lionsgate Entertainment Thierry
Donneau-Golencer
Co-Founder, Tempo AI
Mark Suster
Partner, Launchpad LA
John Underkoffler
Chief Scientist, Oblong
Peter Platzer
Founder/CEO, Nanosatisfi
Maurice Patel
Senior Industry Marketing Manager, Autodesk, Media & Entertainment
51
Arno Gourdol
Senior Executive for the Web Platform, Adobe
Celine Orjubin
Co-Founder, My Little Paris & Merci Alfred
Delphine Ernotte-Cunci
Senior EVP, Orange France Emmanuel Durand
VP Marketing, Warner France
Jean-Luc Neyraut
Deputy CEO, Paris Chamber of Com-merce and Industry
Haruko Minagawa
Touchpoint Evangelist, Hakuhodo
Béatrice Gautier
Business Develop-ment Director, Paris Développement
Charles Robelin
Senior Manager of Applied Research, Amadeus
Dimitri Champollion
Head of Marketing Department, Paris Chamber of Com-merce and Industry
Francois Laburthe
R&D Director, Amadeus
Gervais Pellissier
Chief Executive Officer Delegate, Orange
Jean Marc Merriaux
General Director, CNDP
Ina Fried
Senior Editor, All Things Digital
Benoit Vidal
Chief Digital Officer, MFG Labs
Claire Fulda
Head of Prospective & Brand Innovations, BNP Paribas
Dominique Delport
Global Managing Director, Havas Media Group
Frédéric Josué
Global Executive Advisor, Havas Media
Gilles Fontaine
Deputy Editor in Chief, Internet & Technologies, Challenges
Jean-Michel Lasry
Co-Founder, MFG Labs
Jean-Louis Frechin
Founder, NoDesign.net
Béatrice Mandine
Senior EVP of Communications & Brand, Orange
David Barroux
News Editor in Chief, Les Echos Élie Girard
EVP, Group Strategy and Development, Orange
Gabriel Sidhom
Orange Silicon Valley
Jean-Pierre Dicostanzo
Director of Paris Area, Orange
Jean-Etienne Bouedec
Head of Digital Transformation, Française des Jeux
Jean-Gérard Blanc
Senior Adviser to the President & CEO, Paris Chamber of Commerce and Industry
Participants (from top to bottom)
52
Anne-Catherine Moreno
Business Develop-ment & Customer Relationship manager, Orange Institute
Georges Nahon
CEO and President, Orange Silicon Valley
John Winsor
CEO, Victor and Spoils
Natalie Quizon
User Experience & Content Lead, Orange Silicon Valley
Philippe Dewost
Digital Program Director, Caisse des Depots
Sander Duivestein
Trendwatcher, Sogeti/VINT
Thomas Jorion
Havas Media Global
Julien Deparis
Head of Studies, SupInfocom
Nathalie Boulanger
Startup Ecosystem Director, Orange
Pierre Aussure
Founder/CEO, IVY Search
Sihem Jouini
Associate Professor, HEC
Thomas Giusiano
Producer/CG Director, Tu nous Zapas vus Production
Ludovic Cinquin
CEO France, OCTO Technology
Olivier Fecherolle
Chief Strategy & Development Officer, Viadeo
Pierre Couvry
Associate Director, Havas Media
Sophie Bonnier
CEO’s Office, Orange
Guillaume Payan
Product Manager, Orange Silicon Valley
Marc Gonnet
Head of Strategy/Head of Business De-velopment, Lagardere Active/Europe 1
Mark Plakias
VP of Knowledge Transfer, Orange Silicon Valley
Pascale Diaine
Evangelist, Orange Siliocn Valley
Romeo Machado
Business Devel-opment Manager, Orange Institute
Sylvie Joseph
Senior Executive, Digital Business Unit - La Poste
Patrice Lambert de Diesbach
Financial Communca-tion Director, Orange
Rori Duboff
Global Head of Strategy, Havas Media Group
IO 11 Team
53
Orange Institute 1
The Innovation Imperative
Silicon ValleyNovember 2009
Orange Institute 2
Societal Remix
TokyoJune 2010
Orange Institute 3
Creativity Has a New Address
BeijingSeptember 2010
Orange Institute 4
New Age to New Edge
Silicon ValleyNovember 2010
Orange Institute 5
Sensor Networks as the New Growth Opportunity
MadridMarch 2011
Orange Institute 6
Where Enchantment Meets Inspiration
ParisJune 2011
Orange Institute 10
Six New Waves in the Digital Economy
TokyoApril 2013
Orange Institute 11
When WorldsCombine: How CreativesMeet Geeks
Silicon Valley/LASept/Oct 2013
Orange Institute 7
Innovation as Destiny
Tel AvivOctober 2011
Orange Institute 8
Strategic Imperatives in a Post-IT World
Silicon ValleyMarch 2012
Orange Institute 9
Feedback Economy & Realtime Society
Boston & New YorkOctober 2012
The first session of Orange Institute in 2014 will bring us back to Israel, the Start-Up Nation. Since our first visit in the autumn of 2011, the country’s reputation for incubating world-class startups has been fortified by an amazing string of successful exits. In just the first nine months of 2013, approximately $3 Bn USD have been spent by digital economy giants such as Intel, Google, Cisco, Facebook, and IBM on Israeli startup companies. Part of our time in Israel will
be spent exploring the domains that are driving innovation and investment:
• Innovation models for corporate and public sectors
• New entertainment experiences• Homeland Security and Cybersecurity• Biotech, Nanotech, Cleantech• Online media and analytics
....as always, the educational assets of high-innovation regions are an important part of the story, and since our last interrogation of this topic, important global
agreements forged by the Technion in two opposite directions has been announced. The first is the massive initiative with New York City led by Mayor Bloomberg. The second is the largest gift ever given the school, $130 million donation by Chinese philanthropist Li Ka-Shing.
These are just a few data points confirming Israel is an important node in the global digital economy. Please plan to join us in this first of two sessions planned for 2014.
Preview Orange Institute 12, Spring 2014: Israel, Return to the Start-up Nation
Join The Conversation!
that’s not all folks!Orange Institute #11 can be with you all the time if you have the app. Next time you’re trying to tell a colleague about one of the amazing insights you gained, why not just show her the picture, the faculty bio, the session description? It’s all still there, along with over 150 photos taken by you and your fellow iO classmates. So go open the app, check what’s new, then send a message—because the app is always on and we can tell you, new messages are still coming in weeks after the event itself was finished. That’s why we say, that’s not all, folks—the stories we tell about Siliwood continue...
For more information, please contact Anne-Catherine Moreno at +33 1 44 44 80 15, or email at [email protected]
Institut Orange, SAS au capital de 30 000€—75, rue Olivier de Serres 75015 Paris—514 822 568 RCS Paris