On the afternoon of the third day of the 2009 ASIS&T conference in the drizzly downtown of Vancouver, British Columbia, Special Interest Group/Information Needs, Seeking and Use (SIG/USE) convened a session celebrating its 10th anniversary. Following brief panel presentations on the history of both the SIG itself and information behavior research, the bulk of this session was devoted to an open discussion dedicated to “Forecasting the Next 10 Years for Information Behavior Research.” Although there were four “initial discussants” (Marcia J. Bates, Gary Burnett, Sanda Erdelez and Eric Meyers) and 15 designated “discussants,” the session used the fish bowl technique to ensure that all attendees, whether named in the program or not, had a chance to weigh in and participate.