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Amy Webb

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Nationality
  
American

Religion
  
Jewish


Name
  
Amy Webb

Role
  
Futurist

Amy Webb Data A Love Story

Born
  
c. 1977 (age 38–39)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.

Alma mater
  
Harvard University (Visiting Nieman Fellow)Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism (M.S.)Indiana University (B.S. in Political Science) Jacobs School of Music (Clarinet Performance)

Occupation
  
Futurist, Journalist and Writer; Founder Webbmedia Group Digital Strategy; Co-Founder of Spark Camp

Known for
  
Futurism, Writing, Emerging Technology, Technology Trends, Public Speaking, TED Talks

Notable work
  
Data, A Love Story (Dutton); How To Make J-School Matter Again (Harvard University)

Residence
  
Balti, Maryland, United States

Education
  
Indiana University Bloomington, Jacobs School of Music, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism

People also search for
  
Bashar Shbib, Florence Moureaux, David Wellington

Profiles

Amy webb how i hacked online dating


Amy Webb (born c. 1977) is an American futurist and author. She is the Founder of the Future Today Institute. She is an Adjunct Professor (future of technology) at New York University's Stern School of Business. She was a 2014-15 Visiting Nieman Fellow at Harvard University. Webb was named to the Thinkers50 Radar list of the 30 management thinkers most likely to shape the future of how organizations are managed and led.

Contents

Amy Webb Amy Webb Women39s Voices For Change

How i gamed online data to meet my match amy webb at tedxmidatlantic


Background

Amy Webb httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In 2001, Webb graduated from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. In 2003 she launched a future of news R&D shop. In 2006, she founded Webbmedia Group, which advised primarily media and technology companies. Now in its second decade, Webbmedia Group has a new name––The Future Today Institute––and an expanded scope. FTI answers "What's the future of X?" for a global client base of Fortune 500 and Global 1000 companies, government agencies, large nonprofits, universities and startups.

Amy Webb Amy Webb How I hacked online dating YouTube

In 2009, she founded Knowledgewebb, a digital media training company. That company expanded in 2015 with a new cofounder. It is now called Knowledgewebb Training, and it focuses on digital media training on near-future technologies.

In 2010, Webb cofounded Spark Camp, a next-generation convener that facilitates important conversations on the future of a better society.

Career

During her career as a futurist, Webb has worked with hundreds of government agencies, corporations, nonprofits, universities, and associations from around the world. She has also written extensively about her methodology.

Forbes named her one of the Women Changing the World (Technology category). In 2012, she was named one of Columbia Journalism Review's "20 women to watch".

Books

The Signals Are Talking: How Today's Fringe Becomes Tomorrow's Mainstream Webb's book about her near-future trends forecasting methodology was acquired by PublicAffairs, an imprint of Perseus. It was published December 6, 2016 and selected as one of Fast Company's Best Books of 2016 and as one of Amazon's Best Books of 2016.

How To Make J-School Matter (Again) In 2015, Harvard University published Webb's research on what can be done to reform college and graduate education and the news industry.

Data, A Love Story In 2013 Webb released the memoir Data, A Love Story through Dutton Adult. The book chronicled Webb's attempts at online dating. Initially meeting with failure, Webb collected and analyzed data to game online dating.

Data, A Love Story has been translated into Chinese, Korean, and Portuguese for overseas markets. Critical reception for the book was positive, with Booklist calling it "clever and inventive".

Webb's TED Talk about Data, A Love Story has been translated into 31 languages and has been viewed more than 4.5 million times.

References

Amy Webb Wikipedia


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