Being a moderator
What it means to be a moderator
Being a moderator puts you at the centre of the conversation. You sit in a fully international setting with highly driven peers from leading wind asset owners. It’s one of the strongest ways to build your network — people will remember you.
You lead the discussion. You follow a clear agenda built on real, current challenges submitted by participants before the event. Each topic comes with a headline, description, and often additionally submitted pictures, graphs or power curves. You receive everything in advance.
Your role is simple: make sure everyone is heard and gets input. Silence is never the problem — strong opinions are. Your job is to steer the discussion, manage big egos and keep focus.
Use your instinct. If something is interesting, go deeper. Ask, rephrase, challenge:
What have you done internally?
What have others done?
How has this evolved over time?
What is the real question behind this?
What input would be most valuable?
Each table appoints a secretary so you can focus fully on moderating. Notes are captured and used to summarise key takeaways after the session.
Before the event, you join a short online moderator meeting. You’ll also take part in a pre-event video, sharing your perspective and expectations.
Moderate four roundtables, and you join the event for free.
Most moderators say the same thing afterwards:
👉 It’s intense, valuable — and a lot of fun.