
We will miss Frits Spangenberg as ESOMAR president when he hands over to his successor at New Year. Who ever gets elected, it will be hard to imagine her expressing so clear, fearless and well founded thoughts. In what well may have been his last conference opening as President here at the qualitative conference in Istanbul, he stretched the limit for what can be said, in a very refreshing way.
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Don't you also get bored by opening speakers pouring praise over the host country and just saying the obviously politically correct? When Frits Spangenberg speaks, you'd better listen. When opening the qualitative conference in Istanbul today, he spoke about the importance of free speech for our industry and took the opportunity to point out that YouTube is blocked in Turkey and that there are laws against saying something that might hurt the feelings of the country (this is not an exact qoute of what Frits said - he of course expressed himself very precisely). He never went over the line of actually criticizing Turkey in any way - he is way too smart for that - but he certainly made a point few people would have the guts to make.

He also pointed out an important industry fact, namely that only one of the top ten research companies in the world, who combined generate 60% of the industrys income, is represented at this conference. I am not sure I agree with his conclusion though, that they should be uninterested in new advancements and learnings within qualitative research. This could very well be part of the truth, but I find it at least as likely that they feel they can generate and spread just as much or more new skills and methods within their global groups as they could do at an ESOMAR event - where they would also have to share some of their knowledge with their competitors. It is quite possible that many people and companies out there don't see ESOMAR as the prime source of knowledge in our industry and this should be something to worry about for the world organisation.


If Frits' opening presentation represented some fresh thinking, this came to an abrupt halt as the keynote "speaker" entered the stage. I really like it when ESOMAR tries new ideas and formats, but giving 40 minutes of precious conference time to a flute player and a pianoplayer/composer (who can't even speak English) who half improvises music to a shameless nationalistic, chauvinistic Power Point slide show about Turkish history is not my idea of the ultimate conference opening. Other delegates will probably tell you it was a memorable experience and that the music was fantastic - you decide who you want to trust - but I certainly didn't spot any geniality in Mr Ugurlus loud banging on the piano. What we all probably can agree on, is that it was embarrasing to see all the spelling errors in the English text on the PowerPoint slides. ESOMAR normally checks the speakers slides, but obviously had not been able to do it this time, and the blame should nevertheless fall on the person making the slides.

More impressions will follow after the conference, but let me just prepare you with some homework about todays main buzzword: Ethnography. How short can a moment of observation be and still be called Ethnography? And isn't "Ethnographic interview" a contradiction?
Henrik Hall
SMRN