AIIP 2025 – Proudly Independent and Globally Connected

By Heather Carine

The theme for AIIP 2025 – Proudly Independent and Globally Connected – set the tone for the Association’s virtual Symposium held April 8-10, 2025.

AIIP 2025 was hosted on Whova and seamlessly synced with Zoom. AIIP attendees always want plenty of time to meet and chat.  

Each day started with an online Coffee Catch Up meeting, and as usual Day 1 featured each attendee making an introduction and describing his or her business.  

Other opportunities to globally connect included online speed networking and topic takedowns for small groups to share tips and ideas.

One of the best events I have joined in the past 25 years. The AIIP “gang” provides value, support, and community on a very high level. Proud to belong to it!
Udo Hohlfeld, INO+DATEN, Germany

[AIIP 2025 Coffee Catch Up – Photo by Kelly Berry]

In line with the theme of “proudly independent and globally connected”, AIIP 2025 featured a lineup of five speakers from the US, Canada, Australia, and Britain, all distinguished information professionals or self-employed individuals.

Karen Wickre, founder of Knox Media and author of Taking the work out of networking, opened AIIP 2025 with an engaging session offering practical tips to resolve the ongoing challenge of making and keeping great connections. That is an ongoing challenge for many attendees, particularly as longtime client contacts move on and new contacts need to be developed.

Each year, the Past Presidents fund the Roger Summit Lecture Award to bring an inspiring and stimulating speaker to AIIP’s annual Symposium.

For AIIP 2025, Emily Green, Entrepreneur and founder of Grace Communications and Emily Green LLC, delivered the opening lecture and shared tips on the secret ingredients to build long-lasting client relationships.

On Day 2, Megumi Miki, based in Melbourne, Australia, and author of Quietly Powerful:  How your quiet nature is your hidden leadership strength, delivered an interactive session for attendees engaging with her from US, Canada, UK, Europe, and Australia.

Megumi shared helpful tips on how to be known for what others find useful about what you do so that you can be of service and share your unique perspective.

Her strategies to reframe your perspective, appreciate yourself, and help to connect with others resonated and inspired our not so quiet as well as quiet attendees.

The tips from Megumi Miki were especially helpful and inspirational as I work to become more visible to my audience in a way that is comfortable to me.
AIIP 2025 attendee feedback

Sarah Townsend, UK based copywriter and author of several books including Survival Skills for Freelancers, presented an engaging session on Freelance Confidence and shared proven strategies to help you grow in confidence and show self-employment who’s boss.

She stressed that while experts claim the future is freelance, there are some reality bite statistics regarding freelance life:

  • 90% of freelancers experience isolation
  • 37% took less than 14 days off during 2024
  • 70% don’t feel they have adequate support for their mental health

Sarah shared tips to help with wellbeing, resilience, and confidence – all essential if you are going to survive as a freelancer.

She started by highlighting the very important step that all AIIP members must undertake – realize that you’re not alone, and find your community and make connections with people who understand freelance life.

Dr Michael Ridley, Librarian Emeritus, University of Guelph, based in Canada has a strong research interest in Explainable AI. His publications can be found on his website michaelridley.ca.

Mike started his presentation with a good question to ponder – if artificial intelligence is so smart, why doesn’t it explain itself?

Explainable AI (also known as XAI) Is “concerned with developing approaches to … make artificial systems understandable to human stakeholders” (Langer et al, 2021).

In reality, XAI is focused on “opening the black box” and shining a light on the opaque nature of AI.

Great speakers and fun networking.

AIIP 2025 attendee feedback

Attendees who missed any of these events may catch them all on the Whova platform until October 7, 2025.

Heather Carine is Principal of Carine Research, a specialist market intelligence research service for companies wanting to connect the dots in their market.

She is a seasoned market intelligence specialist with over fifteen years of commercial world experience in investigative research for major corporations, investment bankers, law firms, and commercial advisers.

Heather served on the AIIP 2025 Symposium Committee.

AIIP Symposium Wrap-Up

By Marj Atkinson, AIIP Connections Blog Editor in Chief

The AIIP 2025 three-day virtual Symposium April 8-10, long anticipated and much enjoyed, was every bit the success we had hoped for. Attendees experienced a highly qualified gathering of those looking to launch or elevate their independent information businesses, and the mix of seasoned and fledgling business owners made for very productive interaction.

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AIIP24 Symposium Session Recap: Emotional Intelligence for Info-Entrepreneurs

By Annie McMillion

Emotional intelligence is the single most important influencing variable in personal achievement, career success, leadership, and life satisfaction. – Nelson & Low, 2011; opening slide of June Boyle’s AIIP 24 Symposium session, Emotional Intelligence for Info-Entrepreneurs.

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Setting Long-term Goals with “Fearless Clarity”: An AIIP 2024 Symposium Preview

By Dr. Sarah Glova

(Ed. Note: Dr. Sarah Glova will deliver the Keynote Address at AIIP 2024 Symposium on April 19. We recently talked to her about her work and business strategies and about helping others.)

You use the term “fearless clarity” when helping people establish long-term goals. Are there obstacles or fears unique to the solopreneurs making up AIIP’s membership?

Absolutely! While every solopreneur is unique, one common challenge or fear is that “everything is important” – every email, every call, every event, every opportunity. After all, we’re trying to make big things happen – who are we to say “no” to something? Being clear on what we’re saying yes to also means being clear on when we are saying no – for some solopreneurs, permission to say no can take practice.

Getting to help solopreneurs prioritize their goals and make visible progress – what I call getting “fearlessly clear” – is my wow. It is definitely a challenge as we balance the impactful work of our business with the day-to-day management of our business. But it is absolutely possible, and demonstrating that is some of the coolest work I get to do.

You’re a big proponent of storytelling. Why is that an effective tool in personal development and business growth?

A story is powerful – it adds rocket fuel to the messages we share and helps them go much further than just the message itself. I recently saw a former student who told me she still remembered a story I told in a classroom over 10 years ago – about a curious new member on a board of directors (me) who proposed a shiny new idea only to discover the organization tried and failed at that very thing the year before.

The student said she still thinks of that story – it reminds her to show up with curiosity. She is known at work as “someone who asked good questions,” and she credited that reputation to our class and that story. Imagine if I hadn’t shared it – if, instead, my lecture had just included the science behind curiosity, the studies and statistics, and the templates for asking good questions. I doubt she would have kept that lesson with her for so long. 

You are a business owner, also. What’s your greatest challenge and greatest success, and what did you learn from something that didn’t work out?

My greatest challenge: being patient enough to work long-term on things that require long-term. I’m susceptible to “shiny object syndrome,” so I constantly challenge myself to weigh new interests against long-term goals. 

My greatest success: learning to see myself and my skills not as good or bad but just as things that are. I used to believe I needed to be better – more disciplined, more punctual, more outspoken – to get the things I wanted. Now, I put a lot of energy into learning how I work. For example, I’ve learned that I work really well with deadlines. If I’m working toward something big, I need to create lots of deadlines between here and there. I’m proud to be in a place where I’m more interested in learning how I am than in changing how I am.

Something that didn’t work out: several years ago I tried scaling my company with recurring revenue clients. That business model didn’t work, and I had to tear down the whole thing and lay off a team of really good people. It took a while to bounce back – I was embarrassed and heartbroken. But after that failure, I rebuilt my company using a different model, and the business was almost immediately more profitable – and more fun. I didn’t have to take on projects just to fund payroll, and I wasn’t nearly as stressed all the time. Since then, I’ve been much more comfortable with failure and more willing to trust my gut. 

What are some of the tech trends that might impact a business owner, especially a solopreneur, over the next five years?

Five years is tough. Think of the predictions I might have made in March 2019 – I’m pretty sure those predictions would not have lasted even one year, thanks to what 2020 ended up looking like.

We don’t encounter global pandemics every year, but I do have great respect for change – for example, how Netflix started as an envelope but is now a production company, or how social media used to feel like a billboard but now feels like a search engine. 

  • The rate of change we’re experiencing makes it difficult to predict what’s coming. While I try to keep an eye on the horizon, I also think the most important thing we can do is to value our ability to learn and adapt. 
  • Artificial intelligence is huge, and like most, I’m doing what I can to keep up. I love using AI as a tool – to generate ideas, help identify examples, speed up my editing process, and challenge me with questions I might not have thought of – but I try not to rely on it to generate content. Because AI is going to make our already noisy world even noisier, there’s going to be a huge opportunity for folks who can bring a distinct, human voice to their content and make it stand out. Information professionals are well suited for this opportunity.
  • With customization, tools like AI and smart manufacturing/small manufacturing are making it ever easier to provide custom, tailor-made solutions to individual customers. It’s interesting for all of us to consider how that could apply to the solutions we offer and the customers we serve. 

Finally, what is your reward in helping individuals identify their long-term goals and create a plan to reach them?

When more people reach their goals – when more people put their art, science, voice, leadership, and entrepreneurship into the world – that world is a better place. I know it sounds a little corny, but I believe it with all my heart – it is my life’s work. Our lives get better when more people can achieve the big things they’re working on. The world will be a better place when your goal exists within it. 

The reward is that I get to work with potential. I’m incredibly lucky to help more people get clear about their goals and make those goals a reality. 

Dr. Sarah Glova will deliver the Keynote Address at AIIP 2024 Symposium on April 19, 2024. She founded Reify Media in 2012 and is an entrepreneur, public speaker, and business reporter.

Building and Engaging with Communities – An AIIP 2024 Symposium Preview

By Chris Cochran

Our journey as infopreneurs relies on building and engaging with our communities. They are sources of information and assistance, and we need them – our trusted advisors, our family and friends, and of course our most critical community, our clients – to do business. Success depends on engaging effectively with these communities and continually building and developing them as our business grows. For many infopreneurs AIIP is, and has been, a trusted community, both online and in-person. It is something the association prides itself on.

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St. Louis Uncovered — a Rich Tapestry for AIIP 2024 Symposium Attendees

By Susan Baerwald

Attending AIIP 2024 Symposium brings the thrill of meeting colleagues, broadening your knowledge and understanding of running an independent information business, and the excitement of new ideas – plus renewed energy and confidence.

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AIIP 2024 Symposium: A Pivotal Moment for Your Business Growth

Two AIIP members share their insights and experiences from attending AIIP’s annual conference/symposium. Our next symposium is April 18-21, 2024, in St. Louis, MO. Virtual attendance options are available. Conference registration is now open.

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Make Your Pitch: AIIP 2024 Symposium Call for Speakers

By Liz McLean

With planning for the AIIP 2024 Symposium in full swing, it’s time to show your expertise, build your brand and jump-start infopro momentum by submitting a proposal to share your deep know-how and business stories at the AIIP 2024 Symposium. This year’s theme is “Learn & Grow.”

Topic Guidance

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