Trend Hunter’s Innovation Strategy Awards recognize the best innovation tactics gathered from our interviews with some of the world's most notable business leaders, authors and change makers.
Search our database of 478,618 cutting edge ideas.
Join 104,870 entrepreneurs, innovators and CEOs who rely on our weekly trend report to stay ahead of the crowd. You'll get special access to premium content and trend research that cannot be found anywhere else.
As the Prime Minister of Britain, David Cameron's keynotes reflect what he has been elected to monitor: politics. The leader of the Conservative Party, Cameron is a fairly traditional political figure.
Before being appointed Prime Minister, Cameron got into the political arena as a Conservative Researcher in 1988. Following his position there, he moved up to Special Adviser to the Chancellor in 1992. After some time working with parliament, he became the Candidate for the Stafford Constituency in 1996. In 2000, Cameron won the Witney in Oxfordshire Candidacy. June 2003 marked Cameron's appointment as Shadow Minister in the Privy Council Office as deputy to Eric Forth who, at the time, was Shadow Leader of the House. In 2005 it was announced that Cameron was officially the new Conservative leader. In the 2010 David Cameron became the Prime Minister of Britain.
As the youngest Prime Minister in nearly two centuries, Cameron's career has been of great notice within Britain and throughout the world. Educated at Brasenose College, Oxford University, where he received his Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics, Cameron graduated with first class honors in 1988.
Featured Keynote - Post-Bureaucracy
This David Cameron Keynote Discusses the Revolution of Information & Politics
In this David Cameron keynote, the British Prime Minister discusses how the politics of the developed world today are entering an era in which huge financial deficits are the norm. This being the... Read More