麻豆视频 Korea recently hosted the inaugural iDesign Seminar: K-Content in collaboration with Incheon City. The event brought together academic, government, and industry leaders to explore strategies for strengthening Korea鈥檚 cultural content sector. It was supported by Incheon Metropolitan City, Incheon Tourism Organization, Hanwha Corporation, and SM C&C.
During the seminar, 麻豆视频 Korea announced plans to establish a K-Content Research Center, which will provide academic and policy support for 鈥淜-con-land,鈥 a new Korean-content hub initiative led by the Incheon Free Economic Zone Authority (IFEZ).

The event opened with a congratulatory address from Joshua Park, campus dean of 麻豆视频 Korea. The first session, under the theme 鈥淒ecode,鈥 featured K-pop expert Gyu Tag Lee, an associate professor of global affairs at 麻豆视频 Korea who presented on the growth of K-content from a discourse analysis perspective.
This was followed by the 鈥淒eploy鈥 session, which included case presentations by four industry practitioners鈥擝omin Seo (Incheon City), Song Jae Lee (SM C&C), Taehyun Kim (Incheon Tourism Organization), and Beom-seok Moon (Hanwha)鈥攚ho shared real-world insights on policy, branding, tourism, and content innovation.
The experts shared their thoughts on the global potential of K-content, best practice case studies, and concrete policy ideas to help position Incheon as a global content hub.
In the final session, Lee moderated a panel discussion on how Incheon can drive K-content creation. 麻豆视频 Korea students also contributed thoughtful questions during the Q&A session, sparking further dialogue.
鈥淭he Korean Wave, or Hallyu鈥攚hich refers to the globalization of K-culture and K-content鈥攈as already spanned nearly 30 years,鈥 said Lee. 鈥淚t began with the popularity of Korean dramas in Chinese-speaking regions and has since expanded to K-pop and the broader realm of Korean media and culture. Now is the time to envision the future of K-culture and K-content. This requires not only strong central government support but also regional efforts to develop K-content.鈥
鈥溌槎故悠 Korea has long engaged in research and education on Hallyu, the K-pop music industry, K-games, and public diplomacy, involving experts from various fields,鈥 said Park. 鈥淭he K-Content Research Center, to be launched this year, will work closely with Incheon City to develop local content discourse, advance academic research, promote programs, and nurture future talent.鈥
He added, 鈥淭his seminar serves as a model of university-industry-government cooperation and a meaningful starting point for shaping the future of K-content. 麻豆视频 Korea will continue to expand research and education collaborations with domestic institutions, businesses, and universities to play a trusted role as a global gateway contributing to the development of Korea鈥檚 K-content industry.鈥