Thu, Apr 14, 2005
When I worked at DrDobbsJournal, I did the software development and IT conference circuit regularly. Most of those conferences were incredibly boring, but they were rarely a waste of time. What made them compelling were the attendees. (IM0)
I've been spoiled in the six years since. Not only have the conferences I've attended been more diverse and interesting, many of them have exploited collaborative processes that emphasized participant interaction. That's obviously an advantage if the reason you're attending is to meet interesting folks. Additionally, most of these events were more about social good rather than corporate productivity. As a result, the energy is much more positive. (IM1)
Attending Portals, Collaboration, and Content Management 2005 these past few days was a blast to the past for me, which was exactly why I chose to attend. I wanted to reconnect with the corporate IT community and discover what they were thinking about these days, especially regarding collaboration. I also wanted to test my ideas with this crowd, to see if I still remembered the language of this community and if my message would fly. (IM2)
I gave the first talk in the collaboration track, and it was very well received, moreso than I expected. There was a snafu with the program, which listed my talk as, "Collaboration: What's In It For Me," when the actual title was, "Collaboration: What The Heck Is It?" One woman approached me afterwards and told me that she was originally planning on attending my talk, then saw what the real title was and decided to attend a different one instead. Afterwards, she ate lunch with several people who did attend my talk, and much to her chagrin, they raved about it. (IM3)
Several people told me they enjoyed the interactivity of my presentation. That was intentional. It engaged the audience, and it gave me a chance to learn from them. My plan wasn't to teach, it was to stretch people's minds, to give them an opportunity to think about things in new ways. (IM4)
Folks who know me well or read this blog regularly know how much I tout highly interactive conferences. I think there is a huge opportunity for such an event for IT workers. I heard very little that interested me in the conference tracks. The attendees were far more interesting than the speakers, and most of my learning occurred during the meals. Several people even said as much, completely unprovoked by me. (IM5)
Some other observations: (IM6)
/events | Posted at 6:27pm
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