Paul Mallaghan

(he/him)

Paul Mallaghan

We Are Tilt

Director, Head of Creative Strategy

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Paul Mallaghan is a creative strategist, writer and leader working at the intersection of storytelling, content and emerging technology. As Director and Head of Creative Strategy at We Are Tilt, he leads the development of transformative campaigns and learning experiences for global organisations. With over 20 years’ experience, Paul combines creative thinking with strategic insight to help brands communicate complex ideas in engaging and impactful ways. His work spans content strategy, copywriting and creative direction, with a growing focus on how AI is shaping creativity and communication.

Sessions

Tiffany Willcox

Kate Ashworth Brash

Martyn Fagg

Paul Mallaghan

Charlie Symonds

Who’s Accountable? Making AI Ethics Real Inside Organisations

AI ethics is widely discussed, but far less understood when it comes to actually implementing it inside organisations. This session moves beyond principles and into practice. As AI becomes embedded in decision-making, operations and customer experience, questions around accountability, governance and control are becoming harder to answer. Where does responsibility sit when systems influence outcomes? How do organisations move from high-level frameworks to something enforceable? And what does “responsible AI” actually look like when teams are under pressure to move quickly? Drawing on real-world experience inside a global organisation, this session explores how governance is being approached in practice, where it is falling short, and what leaders need to be thinking about now. It also opens up the broader question. As AI becomes part of how organisations operate, are we building systems we can genuinely stand behind?

Tiffany Willcox

Kate Ashworth Brash

Martyn Fagg

Paul Mallaghan

Charlie Symonds

Who’s Accountable? Making AI Ethics Real Inside Organisations

AI ethics is widely discussed, but far less understood when it comes to actually implementing it inside organisations. This session moves beyond principles and into practice. As AI becomes embedded in decision-making, operations and customer experience, questions around accountability, governance and control are becoming harder to answer. Where does responsibility sit when systems influence outcomes? How do organisations move from high-level frameworks to something enforceable? And what does “responsible AI” actually look like when teams are under pressure to move quickly? Drawing on real-world experience inside a global organisation, this session explores how governance is being approached in practice, where it is falling short, and what leaders need to be thinking about now. It also opens up the broader question. As AI becomes part of how organisations operate, are we building systems we can genuinely stand behind?