Whether you’re a product manager, designer, marketer or a C-level executive crafting software experiences and strategy, there are loads of events to look forward to in 2018.

We’ve collated a list of events, both big and small, from local low-key meetups to the biggest extravaganzas in the product space, for product people to attend. Learn from peer experiences, network with top industry leaders and immerse yourself in the fun workshops at each.

Here are the events (in chronological order) you’ll want to keep an eye out for in 2018, if products are your thing:

When: January 18

Where: New York City, USA

An invite only event following up on the first Product Leader Summit held in the Bay Area, this time gathering on the other coast. 100 product leaders and founders are invited to the event to connect and learn from one another. Featuring keynote talks, workshops, and roundtable discussions. Some of the speakers lined up include former Etsy CEO Chad Dickerson and former VP of Product at Netflix, Gibson Biddle.

When & where: January 23–24 (San Francisco, USA), February 13–14 (Wellington, NZ), March 20–21 (San Francisco), March 26–27 (New York, USA)), April 26–27 (London), June 16–17 (Sao Paulo, Brazil)

These are public workshops organized by the Silicon Valley Product Group. Less of a conference, rather a platform for sharing best practices to demonstrate how great software products are made. SVPG also conducts private on-site workshops for technology-based product companies.

When: February 6–8

Where: San Francisco, USA

Undoubtedly one of the biggest events for product managers and anyone related to the SaaS space. Featured speakers in 2018 include Box CEO Aaron Levie, Hubspot’s Founder Dharmesh Shah and Chief People Officer Katie Burke, Basecamp CEO Jason Fried, MongoDB CMO Meagen Eisenberg, Atlassian CEO Michael Pryor and Moz CEO Sarah Bird — it’s a long list of leaders and influencers in the industry.

When & where: February 10 (Austin, USA), February 24 (Vancouver, Canada), March 10 (Dallas, USA), March 10 (Hyderabad, India), March 10 (Portland, USA), March 11 (Santa Clara, USA)

More ‘unconference’ than conference, ProductCamp is a free, collaborative meetup for product managers and marketers in many cities around the world. You can organize one in your own city if its not already happening by checking the information here.

When: February 12–13

Where: San Francisco, USA

This is the 10th edition of Product Management and Innovation. Talks at the event cover the full range of topics related to products, from innovation to planning, management to strategy, customer insights and what makes high performing product teams tick.

When: March 20 & 21

Where: Amsterdam, Netherlands

A conference that brings Eric Ries’ lean startup ideas to the fore. The conference has workshops, keynotes and case studies in the two days where experts in the field (including Eric Ries) talk about how organizations around the world are applying lean principles and how your team can do the same.

When: March 20–21

Where: Raleigh, USA

Pendemonium is organized by Pendo, the SaaS platform that lets companies track customer experience better via analytics, guides, surveys etc. In the same vein, the conference features workshops and talks that help discern the art and science of building software products by focusing on customer experience. Confirmed speakers so far include Dan Heath(co-author, Made To Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die) and Nir Eyal(author, Hooked: How to Build Habit Forming Products).

When: April 10–11

Where: San Francisco, USA

A two-day which focuses on the best practices and learnings in consumer psychology, design and behavioral science — all extremely important aspects of building a successful product. One day for workshops and another is kept for talks.

When & where: April 23–24 (Dublin, Ireland) & October 1–3 (Cleveland, USA)

Hear from other product managers, founders and product leaders about the methods, tools and frameworks being used to build new software products. The European conference features a talk from co-founder and chief strategy officer of Intercom, Des Treynor, while the American edition features talks from product discovery coach Tessa Torres and VP of Engineering at Reddit, Nick Caldwell.

When: May 8-11

Where: Budapest, Hungary

Craft conference focuses on the tools, methods and practices that are being used to build quality software products. This makes it an interesting proposition not just for decisions makers and leaders in the product space but also developers. The event has meetups and workshops on two days and speaking sessions on the remaining days.

When: May 16–18

Where: Yspilanti, USA

A unique conference in that it is very much at a grassroot level and run by volunteers. Agile and Beyond helps people in a variety of roles and with differing levels of experience, learn more about agile processes and practices. There is a ton to learn for everyone from about 100 sessions across two days.

When & where: May 21–22 (London, UK) & October 1–3 (Boston, USA)

Business of Software keeps its attendee list smaller than most on purpose so that everyone can have a more fulfilling and enriching personal interaction. This conference routinely attracts some of the best speakers on building and managing software products. Topics covered include product strategy and management, launching new products, attracting the right kind of talent for your business, finance etc.

When: May 31-June 1

Where: Salt Lake City, USA

Front is an annual UX and product management conference held in Utah. User experience designers and product managers discuss real case studies of success and learning throughout this two-day conference. It’s a mix of practical and inspirational talks for junior to senior level product people.

When: June 3–8

Where: Las Vegas, USA

Held in parallel with Agile Dev West Conference and DevOps West Conference, Better Software West focuses on digital transformation, development and test frameworks, product owners and managers, and user stories. The conference also has an Agile Leadership Summit, where thought leaders from the industry share their knowledge and experiences.

When: June 13–15

Where: San Francisco, USA

A conference especially for those creating and managing enterprise products. Themes at Enterprise UX tackle challenges of scale, complexity, distributed decision-making etc. The two main program days (June 14 & 15) will consist of four themes, each like a mini-conference in itself. These are Build, Invest, Communicate and Scale.

When: June 21

Where: Paris, France

This will be the third edition of LPC, which is organized by the non-profit Product Guys. The 2017 edition had speakers from companies like Sprintly and Pendo.io.

When & where: July 16–17 (San Francisco, USA) and October 18–19 (London, UK)

“By product people, for product people”. Mind The Product is one of the biggest conferences for product managers to connect with peers and learn more about building start ups and benefit from the community’s knowledge. Past conferences have featured talks from Jared Spool (User Interface Engineering), Des Treynor (Intercom), Jake Knapp (ex-Google Ventures), and David Cancel (Drift).

MTP Engage

When: April 20

Where: Hamburg, Germany

A smaller but engaging event created last year to complement Mind The Product. Accommodating an audience of just about 300, MTP Engage this year is likely to have 4 keynote speakers and 12 sessions for hands-on learning with various product leaders.

When: August 8–9

Where: Vancouver, Canada

One of the headline conferences in Canada, where founders and leaders will talk about their growth secrets, challenges and learning from scaling their companies.

When: September 4–6

Where: Barcelona, Spain

Atlassian Summit has talks, meetups, training courses for product managers and a great chance to network as well as learn more about Atlassian’s product teams.

When: October 15–17

Where: Dublin, Ireland

“A global gathering of SaaS Leaders”, SaaStock attracts some of the top founders, executives and venture capitalists in the industry. This year’s speaker lineup include the founders of HotJar, Drift and Segment, as well as top executives from Matrix Partners, Bessemer Venture Partners and Port Nine Capital.

When & where: October 18 (Melbourne, Australia) & October 24 (Sydney, Australia)

Connect and learn from the product management community in Australia. Leading the Product gives the opportunity to learn from leaders in the industry as well as seek personal development.

When: Throughout the year; upcoming meetups on January 25 and February 13

Where: Palo Alto, CA, USA

Organized by Dan Olsen, author of the Lean Product Playbook, this event regularly features industry leaders sharing best practices for product managers, designers and developers.

When: TBA

Where: Israel

ProductX is organized by the Israeli association for product managers. Apart from the annual conference, which was held in Tel Aviv last year, it has initiated courses, webinars, workshops and round tables.

When: November 28–29

Where: San Francisco, California, USA

Last year Google held its first design sprint conference for leaders in design thinking and product innovation. Attendance for the event was by invitation only and featured designers, researchers, and product managers. While details for this year are yet to be announced, it is sure to be an engaging event which gives attendees the chance to learn much via case studies, unconference sessions, workshops and keynote talks.

When: September 7

Where: Burlingame, California, USA

The Women in Product conference is exclusively for women sharing their experiences and knowledge across a variety of roles from founder to VP of Product. Last year saw talks from women at leading teams like Facebook, Google, Netflix, and Slack.

When: November 14–15

Where: Zurich, Switzerland

Product Management Festival features experts and practitioners from the product management community, highlighting specific issues or problems from their personal experience, and what their learning was from the challenge. Last year’s conference featured a diverse group of speakers from Google, Flipkart, Shopify, Facebook and Shopify.

When & where: TBA

BASiS is centered around harnessing data for better product decisions. Backed by Uservoice, the conference is especially for those who are keen to observe, measure, test and iterate on the product backed by data-driven decisions.

When: November 1–2

Where: Lisbon, Portugal

A big pull in Europe for “passionate product designers and managers”. Last year’s conference was held in sunny Lisbon, Portugal and featured workshops & talks on lean service creation methodology, product innovation, usability testing etc. from speakers like Dan Olsen(‘The Lean Product Playbook’), Mrra Lansisalo(Futurice), and SC Moatti(Opera) to name a few.

When: November 4

Where: London, UK

Attracting product managers, designers, founders as well as engineers, JAM is a no-nonsense event on what it takes to build successful products. Oh, and there’s also great food and location. Last year the event was held among London’s best street food vendors, in Hawker House, and had people from Intercom, Facebook, Memrise, and Strava sharing their product stories.

When & where: TBA

A one-day event, featuring talks from people who are involved with digital products and experiences in any way possible, right from managers to marketers. Last year’s lineup included people from BuzzFeed, Tumblr, Microsoft and Duolingo to name a few.

When: TBA

Where: Boston, USA

An event for ‘frontline PMs’, those that are deeply engaged in elevating their products, whether in the B2B, B2C or B2G space. There’s also enough for aspiring PMs and upper management to sink their teeth into. Last year’s conference had talks and workshops on topics like roadmapping, user research, beta programs, cross-functional communication etc. And there’s extra love and support from the rich and diverse tech community in Boston!

When: November 27–28,2018

Where: San Francisco, USA

It will explore how brands can become device agnostic and capable of delivering a consistent experience across all devices in the age of the connected consumer.