June 18, 2025
9:00 am – 10:30 am PDT | 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm EDT | 5:00 pm – 6:30 pm BST

Structured content is finally getting its moment. Long under appreciated outside the inner circle of tech comm professionals, it is now stepping in the spotlight. As a sine qua non for effective AI, structured content is driving a massive and urgent interest at the highest levels of organizations.
This unprecedented opportunity comes with a major shift in adoption strategy enabled by Content Delivery Platforms (CDPs). Going “delivery-first” rather than “structure-first” delivers early, visible outcomes across the enterprise, and paves the way for faster, broader adoption.
Join us for an insightful webinar with Frank Miller, thought leader in the information development industry and CEO of Ryffine, and Fabrice Lacroix, AI and search technology pioneer and CEO of Fluid Topics, as they share actionable strategies to:
– Turn the momentum of AI into enterprise buy-in for structured content initiatives
– Leverage your existing content with modern content delivery for early results across the company
– Navigate a more flexible, incremental adoption path of structured content with growing benefits along the way
Presented by Fabrice Lacroix and Frank Miller

Fabrice Lacroix is a serial entrepreneur and a technology pioneer. He has been working for 25 years on the development of innovative solutions around search technology, content enrichment and AI. He is the founder of Fluid Topics, the leading Content Delivery Platform that reinvents how users search, read and interact with technical documentation.
For nearly 20 years, Frank Miller has been in the trenches of structured content implementations. As founder of Ryffine, he’s guided teams across virtually every industry—from manufacturing to healthcare to software—through the challenges of making structured content work in the real world.
Frank has collaborated with documentation teams of all sizes and worked alongside most major technology vendors in the structured content space. He’s particularly drawn to technical documentation as an undervalued discipline, finding satisfaction in championing the business critical work that rarely gets the recognition it deserves.