Dr. Joe Webb is known for telling it like it is. In this special keynote address, Dr. Joe shares his take on the state of the industry, giving you the most current industry economic data available and discussing where he sees print sales heading over the course of the next six months. Dr. Joe will cover the profit leaders and what they are doing that allows them to stay on top during a tough year, print and content creation forecasts for 2010 and what he sees as the next wave of technology.
As one of the print industry's best known consultants, Dr. Joe delivers a candid economic discussion, peppered with technology, sales and customers service strategies that can impact your fiscal future.
Dr. Joe Webb is one of the graphic arts industry’s best-known consultants, forecasters, and commentators. He is the director of WhatTheyThink.com’s Economics and Research Center.
A 30-year veteran of the graphic arts industries, he was the founder of the influential TrendWatch information service, which was sold to Reed Elsevier in 2000. Since January 2003, his “Mondays with Dr. Joe” column has become a must-read feature on WhatTheyThink.com, as have his quarterly economic forecast webinars, where he analyzes trends in the economy, technology, and the industry, interpreting what they mean for executives and their strategic decisions.
He is a Ph.D. graduate of the NYU Center for Graphic Communications Management and Technology (1987) and serves on the Center’s Board of Advisors. He holds an MBA in Management Information Systems from Iona College (1981) and was a magna cum laude graduate in Managerial Sciences and Marketing from Manhattan College (1978), and was a member of the economics honor society. He has taught graduate and undergraduate courses in marketing, market research, quantitative analysis, business policy, and organizational behavior. He started in the industry with Agfa’s Graphic Systems Division and was later a marketing executive with Chemco Photoproducts, entering consulting full time in 1987. Among his publications is the controversial “Renewing the Print Industry: A Contrarian’s Constructive Perspective.”