Tuesday, May 19, 2026
The energy at conferences is always hardest to explain to people who are not there.
From the outside, it can all seem fairly interchangeable. Hotel meeting rooms. Name badges. Panels. Coffee stations. A few days “away” from the office, though it never stays completely behind does it?
And honestly, after the last several years, most of us have become very good at convincing ourselves we can accomplish nearly everything remotely anyway. So why bother? Why take on the expense?
We can stay informed from anywhere now. We can stream educational sessions, skim summaries, listen to podcasts between meetings, and absorb an endless flow of industry commentary without ever stepping onto a plane (let’s not even get started on the hassle of the planes!).
For a while, that feels sufficient.
And then you walk into a hotel lobby during a conference week and remember there is something entirely different that happens when people gather together in person. You feel it almost immediately.
Not just in the movement and noise, but in the way people engage with one another. Conversations start in passing and somehow continue twenty minutes later near the elevators. Someone pulls another person into a discussion because “you really need to hear this.” Small groups form around shared frustrations, unexpected ideas, or questions nobody seems to have fully answered yet.
People think differently together than they do alone. You hear it in the hallways and exhibitor spaces between sessions. Someone mentions a challenge they are facing, and suddenly three people are offering perspectives shaped by entirely different markets, business models, or experiences. A conversation that starts with one problem drifts naturally into staffing, technology, consumer behavior, leadership, or risk in ways nobody could have planned at the beginning of the discussion.
And somewhere inside all of that movement, ideas start connecting.
Not every conversation leads to a breakthrough insight, of course. But there is something clarifying about being surrounded by people who are all trying to solve difficult problems at the same time. One conversation sparks another. Someone describes an issue differently than you have been framing it. Someone else says out loud the exact concern you thought your company alone was wrestling with.
You leave realizing your frustrations were not as isolated as they felt sitting alone at your desk a few weeks earlier.
Technology has made it easier than ever to access information, but information by itself does not always create momentum. In fact, there are times when consuming endless amounts of disconnected updates and snippets leaves people feeling more stuck, not less. More aware of problems, perhaps, but not necessarily closer to solutions. Overwhelm sets in.
There is something about real conversation that changes the equation.
The formal presentations are certainly valuable; often they get us primed to think about things in a new way. Yet, it is often the discussions afterward that stay with you. The follow-up conversations over coffee. The moments where people begin thinking out loud together and crafting their way towards new ideas.
Those are often the moments where the best solutions begin to take shape. Not because everyone suddenly agrees, but because problems almost always look different once they are exposed to multiple perspectives, instead of carried alone in isolation.
That may be one reason the mood at conferences feels a little different now than it once did. People seem slower to rush through interactions. More willing to linger in conversations. More curious about what others are seeing in their corners of the industry.
You can feel it late at night in hotel lobbies when conversations are still going long after the official schedule has ended. You can feel it in the crowded spaces between sessions where people continue debating ideas that started on stage but became far more interesting once different and unique experiences enter the discussion.
Perhaps that is the hardest part to advertise, because it is difficult to measure neatly afterward. But you know it when you feel it. And in a world increasingly designed around speed, efficiency, and constant intake, that reminder feels more valuable than ever.
We’re having a blast at NS3 this week. The conversations, the energy, and the exchange of ideas have a way of reminding you why these gatherings matter.
If you’re here too, stop me sometime in the hallway or lobby and tell me the most interesting perspective you’ve heard so far. For me, those conversations end up being the best part of the week.
Until Next Time,
Mary Schuster
Chief Knowledge Officer
October Research, LLC