Industry April 1, 2026 6 min

Why I’m Excited about IDC Directions 2026

My first day at IDC started at IDC Directions 2025. It didn’t feel like a conference. It felt like a room where decisions were being shaped. That’s why, if you’re on the fence about attending this year, it’s worth taking a closer look.

My introduction to IDC didn’t come from a report or a pitch. It came from sitting in a room at IDC Directions 2025.

But within the first few sessions, it was clear this was something different.

At most events, the product is something you can demo. At IDC Directions, the product is the data. Every session was grounded in it. Not opinions, not surface-level trends, but actual evidence. What the data shows. What it means. And most importantly, what you should do next because of it.

I remember walking in with pretty standard expectations. I thought it would feel like most customer events I’d been to before. Some presentations, maybe a few product narratives, a chance to network and pick up a couple of useful ideas.

When the data is the product, the conversation shifts. It moves from opinion to evidence, and that changes how decisions get made.

That shift changes everything.

Even the panel sessions felt different. Instead of talking about challenges in the abstract, people were digging into how they were navigating them. What was working, what wasn’t, where things were breaking down. It wasn’t about agreeing that problems exist. It was about figuring out how to move forward.

If you’re responsible for making decisions in this environment, that difference matters.

What I Saw in the Room

What stood out just as much as the content was the energy in the room.

Every seat was filled. People weren’t distracted. They were paying attention, taking photos of slides, and writing things down. After sessions, you’d see people immediately tracking down analysts to continue the conversation.

The 1:1 area for client/analyst meetings was packed, rows of tables with discussions happening back-to-back.

It didn’t feel like people were there to hear something interesting. It felt like they were there to get answers to bring back to their teams. And that’s a very different kind of environment because the conversations are grounded in reality, not theory. That level of engagement tells you something important. People saw immediate value in applying what they were hearing right away.

The Moment It Clicked

There was one moment that really made it click for me.

It was during the rapid-fire predictions session after the breakouts. The analysts took everything they had shared across the event and pushed it forward. Not just “here’s what’s happening,” but “here’s what we see in the future.”

It’s one thing to tell someone it’s raining. It’s another thing to tell them they’re going to need an umbrella while the sun is still shining. That’s what IDC does. It connects insight to action before the urgency is obvious. It helps you prepare for decisions before the pressure shows up.

What Changed for Me

I left that event with a completely different understanding of what IDC actually is.

Honestly, I was giddy. Because I realized what access to this kind of expertise really means.

At previous companies, I would have pushed hard just to get time with analysts like this. Now I get to work with them directly. People like Laurie Buczek, who advises CMOs, CROs, and strategy leaders on how to modernize marketing, shift business models, and reduce risk.

That means I can take a real plan, something I’m actively working on, and get guidance grounded in data and real market perspective. That’s not just helpful. It changes how quickly you can make decisions and how confident you are in them. Instead of debating internally for weeks, you can pressure-test your thinking with people who see the market every day.

Why This Year Feels Different

And it’s a big part of why I’m so excited about Directions this year. Because if last year was about seeing the value, this year feels like it’s about applying it in a much more urgent environment.

The conversation around AI has changed quickly. You can hear it in the questions leaders are asking. It’s no longer about what AI is or where to experiment. Now it’s about how to scale it, operationalize it, govern it, and prove that it’s actually delivering value.

The shift from exploration to execution is real.

Visit the IDC Directions 2026 event page to see more about what’s going on in Boston.

AI is no longer about discovery. It’s about evolution. And that shift raises the stakes. These aren’t future decisions anymore. They’re decisions that impact how the business performs now.

That creates a different kind of pressure. The decisions being made now will shape the next few years for many organizations. There’s less room for trial and error, and a much greater need for clarity.

That’s where IDC plays a very specific role. Not by adding more noise, but by helping leaders focus on what matters, grounded in evidence, so they can move forward with confidence.

What I’m Looking Forward to at Directions 2026

Going into Directions 2026, I’m looking forward to very different things than I was last year.

  • I want to hear how IDC is thinking about the future of tech intelligence, especially from new IDC CEO, Lorenzo Larini.
  • I’m interested in where the data is pointing when it comes to AI investment and value, not just potential.
  • I’m paying close attention to how conversations around the agentic era are evolving, and what that means for how businesses operate and compete.
  • And I’m especially interested in the AI Lab.

There’s a limit to what you can absorb from reading. Being able to engage directly, ask questions, and explore how these insights apply in real scenarios brings a different level of clarity.

Check out the full IDC Directions 2026 agenda and learn what topics will be discussed.

Who Benefits Most from IDC Directions?

Stepping back, I think the people who will get the most out of this event are the ones who are actively trying to make decisions right now. If you’re responsible for strategy, for AI policy, or even for bringing AI-powered products to market, the environment has changed.

Buyers are using AI. They’re using data. They’re relying on trusted intelligence to guide their decisions. Understanding how those decisions are being shaped isn’t optional anymore. It directly impacts how you position, invest, and compete.

If You’re Still Deciding–

If you’re on the fence about attending, I’d put it this way:

You can spend time piecing things together on your own. Reading reports, interpreting signals, trying to build a clear plan in a very noisy environment, or…

You can be in the room. Just like me.

Hear the latest insights directly from the people producing the data. Talk through your specific challenges. Compare notes with others who are navigating the same decisions. IDC Directions isn’t about more information. It’s about making the right decisions sooner before the cost of waiting shows up in your business.

And once you’ve seen what that looks like in practice, it’s hard not to want to be there again.

Ryan Smith - Content Marketing Director - IDC

Ryan Smith is the Director of Content Marketing at IDC, where he leads brand-level content and social media strategy, aligning research insights with compelling storytelling to engage technology decision-makers. With a background in both IT and marketing, Ryan brings a unique blend of technical understanding and creative strategy to his work. He’s also a seasoned storyteller, speaker, and podcast host who believes the right message, told the right way, can drive both trust and transformation.

Subscribe to our blog

IDC Directions 2026

IDC Directions 2026 - Agenda

IDC Directions 2026 - Analysts