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pdfl - ep16 - show notes
The Future of L&D Conferences: Breaking the Mould with Anamaria Dorgo and Dinye HernandaEpisode SummaryIn Episode 16 of Product Design for Learning, host Greg Arthur is joined by Anamaria Dorgo, Learning and Community Consultant at Handle with Brain, and Dinye Hernanda, Founder and Learning Designer at haus of ilmu. Together, they explore the current state of learning and development (L&D) conferences, discussing what works, what doesn’t, and how a shift towards more participatory, community-led formats could transform the way L&D professionals gather, collaborate, and grow. From personal experiences to organising their own “nonference”, this is a candid, insightful conversation about designing conferences that actually enable learning.
Guest Profile🎙 Anamaria DorgoRole: Learning and Community Consultant at Handle with Brain
Highlights:
Role: Founder & Learning Designer at haus of ilmu
Highlights:
Dinye Hernanda:
Her first major L&D event was Online Educa Berlin, where she engaged as a speaker, attendee, and behind-the-scenes contributor. While she valued the exposure, she found the experience overly polished and lacking deeper learning impact.
Anamaria Dorgo:
Also attended OEB, describing it as large, impersonal, and not designed for solo attendees. Although it was energising to be among peers, she noticed a lack of deliberate structure to encourage meaningful networking or engagement.
What’s the Current State of Learning Conferences?Anamaria:
Described most conferences as content-heavy marathons with minimal design for participant interaction. Often overwhelming, with too little reflection space.
Dinye:
Argued that most L&D conferences contradict what L&D professionals themselves advocate: learning isn’t an event. Conferences should embody the principles we preach—yet most don’t.
Where Are We Missing Opportunities?The Nonference emerged from a local L&D Shakers hub in Amsterdam—not from protest, but from curiosity. The community wanted a learning event that felt different, human, and co-created.
Key Features:Dinye:
Imagines a learning dojo—a space for continuous practice, shared effort, and collective improvement. Where “masters” and “students” are peers and everyone contributes to the experience.
Anamaria:
Points to the Next Learning Conference in the Netherlands as a promising model. With multiple learning tracks, creative spaces, and hands-on activities, it balances commercial needs with genuine participant experience.
What’s the Future of Learning Conferences?Product Design for Learning, hosted by Greg Arthur, explores how learning professionals can apply product design thinking to build more effective, engaging, and scalable learning experiences. Each episode blends voices from L&D, design, and strategy, spotlighting real-world challenges and practical solutions.
pdfl - ep16 - show notes
The Future of L&D Conferences: Breaking the Mould with Anamaria Dorgo and Dinye HernandaEpisode SummaryIn Episode 16 of Product Design for Learning, host Greg Arthur is joined by Anamaria Dorgo, Learning and Community Consultant at Handle with Brain, and Dinye Hernanda, Founder and Learning Designer at haus of ilmu. Together, they explore the current state of learning and development (L&D) conferences, discussing what works, what doesn’t, and how a shift towards more participatory, community-led formats could transform the way L&D professionals gather, collaborate, and grow. From personal experiences to organising their own “nonference”, this is a candid, insightful conversation about designing conferences that actually enable learning.
Guest Profile🎙 Anamaria DorgoRole: Learning and Community Consultant at Handle with Brain
Highlights:
Role: Founder & Learning Designer at haus of ilmu
Highlights:
Dinye Hernanda:
Her first major L&D event was Online Educa Berlin, where she engaged as a speaker, attendee, and behind-the-scenes contributor. While she valued the exposure, she found the experience overly polished and lacking deeper learning impact.
Anamaria Dorgo:
Also attended OEB, describing it as large, impersonal, and not designed for solo attendees. Although it was energising to be among peers, she noticed a lack of deliberate structure to encourage meaningful networking or engagement.
What’s the Current State of Learning Conferences?Anamaria:
Described most conferences as content-heavy marathons with minimal design for participant interaction. Often overwhelming, with too little reflection space.
Dinye:
Argued that most L&D conferences contradict what L&D professionals themselves advocate: learning isn’t an event. Conferences should embody the principles we preach—yet most don’t.
Where Are We Missing Opportunities?The Nonference emerged from a local L&D Shakers hub in Amsterdam—not from protest, but from curiosity. The community wanted a learning event that felt different, human, and co-created.
Key Features:Dinye:
Imagines a learning dojo—a space for continuous practice, shared effort, and collective improvement. Where “masters” and “students” are peers and everyone contributes to the experience.
Anamaria:
Points to the Next Learning Conference in the Netherlands as a promising model. With multiple learning tracks, creative spaces, and hands-on activities, it balances commercial needs with genuine participant experience.
What’s the Future of Learning Conferences?Product Design for Learning, hosted by Greg Arthur, explores how learning professionals can apply product design thinking to build more effective, engaging, and scalable learning experiences. Each episode blends voices from L&D, design, and strategy, spotlighting real-world challenges and practical solutions.