Dr. Weinberger began his "career" in the late '70s teaching philosophy at New Jersey's Stockton State College for five years. (He has a Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Toronto.) During this time he maintained his steady freelance writing of humor, reviews and intellectual and academic articles, publishing in places as diverse as The New York Times, Harvard Business Review, Smithsonian, Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine and TV Guide.
In 1985, after being denied tenure because the tenure quota was filled, and after an enthusiastic but well-mannered student demonstration in his support, he became a junior marketing guy at Interleaf, an innovative start-up with new ideas on how to create and structure documents. At Interleaf he helped launch the industry's first document management system and its first electronic document publishing system, years ahead of the Web. He left Interleaf after 8 years, as VP of Strategic Marketing.
He founded the one-person strategic marketing company, Evident Marketing, in 1994. He has consulted to a wide variety of companies, including RR Donnelley, Intuit, Sun Microsystems, Edelman PR, Microsoft, Yahoo, and the Christopher Reeve Foundation. He frequently advises innovative startups.
In late 1995, he joined Open Text as VP of Strategic Marketing because he saw an opportunity to help shape the way intranets are used. As part of the senior management team, Dr. Weinberger helped Open Text move from one of the first Web search engine companies (the engine behind Yahoo!) to market- and thought-leadership in Web-based collaborative software.
After helping to take Open Text public in 1996, Dr. Weinberger returned to consulting, writing and speaking, helping to found a couple of dot-coms, and serving on industry and company boards. In 2000, Perseus published The Cluetrain Manifesto, of which is is a co-author. It became a national best-seller.
In 2002, Perseus published Small Pieces Loosely Joined to enthusiastic reviews.
In 2007, Times Books published Everything Is Miscellaneous: The Power of the New Digital Disorder.
Dr. Weinberger currently writes too much, including weblogs, articles for Wired, Salon, USAToday, Harvard Business Review, and many more.
During the 2004 presidential campaign, he was Senior Internet Advisor to the Howard Dean campaign, consulting on Internet policy. He was a policy adviser to the John Edwards campaign in 2008.
In 2004 he was made a Fellow (now Senior Researcher) at Harvard's prestigious Berkman Institute for Internet & Society, where he's very happy.
In 2010. he became co-director of the Harvard Library Innovation Lab at Harvard Law School, where he works on making openly accessible all that libraries knowledge.
In 2010, he became a Franklin Fellow at the United States State Department, working with the eDiplomacy group on the use of Web 2.0 and social software.
Education
Dr. Weinberger earned his doctor of philosophy in philosophical studies at the University of Toronto. His undergraduate degree, summa cum laude, with honors, is from Bucknell University.
Speaking
Dr. Weinberger speaks around the world on the effect of the Web. He is consistently rated very highly as a speaker.
Writing
Dr. Weinberger has been writing and publishing in national magazines for over 25 years. He has been a technical columnist for a computer magazine, a humor columnist for Oregon's largest newspaper, and a gag writer for Woody Allen's comic strip for seven years. He was an early blogger, and has a substantial Twitter following. He is one of the authors of the best-seller The Cluetrain Manifesto and is the author of Small Pieces Loosely Joined and Everything Is Miscellaneous. He is a columnist for KMWorld and il sole 24 ore, Italy's leading financial paper. He is a frequent commentator on NPR's "All Things Considered" and "Here and Now."
His new book is Too Big to Know (Basic Books, Fall 2010). It explores our new strategies for understanding a world that is overstuffed with information and within which no one agrees about anything.
Honors and Boards
Dr. Weinberger has served on the AIIM Emerging Technology Advisory Group, the Seybold Conference Advisory Board, the World Congress of Philosophy Advisory Board, the Virtual Business advisory board, and the Xplor Business Strategies Advisory Board. He has served on product and advisory Boards of well-known organizations such as Microsoft, Yahoo! and the Christopher Reeve Foundation, as well as smaller, innovative companies such as Technorati, Metacarta, The Information Architecture Association, Corante, BlogBridge, The Conversation Network, SocialText, and Global Voices.
In 2004 he was made a Fellow at Harvard's prestigious Berkman Institute for Internet & Society. In 2010, he became a Franklin Fellow at the United States State Department, working with the eDiplomacy group on the use of Web 2.0 and social software.