There is something that happens when people who normally only interact over Teams or email finally sit in the same room. Conversations get easier. You pick up the phone more willingly when you know the person on the other end. The nLogic Technical Gathering is built around that simple idea.
Across Norway, Sweden, and Denmark, nLogic’s engineers and consultants work with many of the same technologies, the same vendors, and often very similar client problems. When most collaboration happens through digital channels, each country tends to find its own solutions to problems the others have already solved. This gathering is a chance to change that.
Sharing What We Know
A big part of the programme is colleagues presenting real cases from their own work. Projects from Denmark, Norway, and Sweden get put on the table so others can learn from them. What worked, what didn’t, and what to think about next time. That kind of first-hand knowledge is far more useful than reading a white paper.
On top of that, key vendor partners join for technical sessions. Arista, Palo Alto Networks, and HPE all come in to share where their products are heading and what is new. For consultants advising clients on technology decisions, that kind of direct access matters.
“Knowledge that stays in one country is only doing a third of the work it could be doing.”
The Informal Stuff Matters Too
The sessions are just the start.. Some of the best outcomes from events like this come from a side conversation over lunch, or realising over dinner that a colleague in another country has been dealing with the exact same headache. The programme makes room for that, with a team activity and a shared dinner on the first evening.
When things get complicated on a project, you reach out to people you actually know. That is what the social side of this gathering is really about.
Grow Together.
nLogic Group is not just three national companies under the same name. The ambition is to work as one team, where competence and experience travel freely across borders. A consultant in Stockholm should know who in Oslo to call. An engineer in Copenhagen should be able to draw on something a colleague in Sweden figured out last month.
Two days in Oslo will not do that on their own. But getting everyone in the same room is a good place to start.
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