The Agriculture Conference is an event that brings together agricultural experts and stakeholders to discuss the current trends and breakthroughs in agriculture. The conference serves as a forum for professionals in the industry to share knowledge, network and collaborate; one of the Agriculture Conference’s main goals is to address the difficulties that the agriculture business is facing, such as climate change, resource depletion and food insecurity. The conference aims to investigate new techniques and solutions that can assist boost agricultural productivity, efficiency and sustainability.
Farmers, researchers, policymakers and business leaders can network, exchange knowledge and collaborate on creative solutions for a more sustainable and resilient agriculture economy at the Agriculture Conference. Finally, the Agriculture Conference brings together professionals from the agriculture industry to share ideas and cooperate on solutions to the industry's difficulties.
The conference includes keynote speeches, panel discussions, technical presentations and workshops on a wide range of agricultural issues, including:
- Agriculture and food systems that are sustainable
- Precision farming and data-driven farming
- Climate-smart agriculture and agroforestry
- Genetic engineering and agricultural biotechnology
- Food security and safety
- Rural development and agricultural policy
- Participants can also display their goods, technologies and solutions through exhibitions and demonstrations at the conference.
Speaker Guidelines
Organize Your Research
- State the hypothesis and purpose of your research.
- Describe your methods of investigation.
- Include data collected and what was learned.
- Give conclusions based on the collected data.
- Emphasize the significance and highlights of the research.
Shape Your Presentation
- Prepare notes that highlight the salient points of your talk.
- Practice the delivery of your talk, along with your slide sequence. Be sure your talk fits the time allotted.
- Use simple sentences. Avoid jargon, highly specialized vocabulary, and unfamiliar abbreviations.
- Think about questions you might be asked, and prepare your answers.
- Audio-visuals should amplify your talk, not duplicate it.
- Do not include music or film clips or other copyrighted content with your presentation unless it is directly relevant to your research. If you must include music, film clips, or similar content, please ensure that it is either open source or content for which you have copyright permissions to use. Optimally display your work—don't use words if a picture conveys it more clearly (graphs, tables, charts, etc.).
- Use line graphs to show trends; bar graphs to compare magnitudes; pie graphs to demonstrate relative portions of a whole.
- Make sure your supporting audio-visuals are concise, uncluttered, and easily read from a distance. We recommend that you use a font of at least eighteen points or larger. This is especially important in presentations to a virtual audience because screen sizes vary by user.
- Request special AV equipment early or it may not be available.