Will Nerd Conferences Survive?

Seth Godin meet Aral Balkan and welcome to Singularity.

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Now that I’ve done my best as matchmaker I ask only one thing — please don’t take SXSW away from me. I mean, my god do I need nerd talk followed by long therapy sessions on 6th Street.

…oh, and lest I forget — Aral you’re a bastard for being out in front on this at the right time (just once I want the brilliant get rich quick scheme). ;-)



5 Responses to “ “Will Nerd Conferences Survive?”

  1. Keith Peters says:

    Well, if you read the whole article, Seth is talking more about raising the bar for speakers, not advocating switching over to all web conferences. As cool as Singularity may be (I’m a speaker), it’s not like I’m sitting here tingling waiting for it to happen. But when I think about flying over to Flash on the Beach this September, for example, I do get pretty psyched.

  2. Brooks says:

    @Kieth – Sure I think Seth essentially says “you better bring it…and make it interactive” in order to make it worth the time and expense of the trip.

    Don’t get me wrong, I think we web nerds underestimate the power / impact of face to face a lot. I also think Aral needs to prove he can make an online conference compelling.

    I definitely see online conferences posing a serious threat to physical ones which is why conference organizers and speakers need to “raise the bar” as you put it.

    …my only goal really was to make light of my passion for 6th St.;-)

  3. Tom Ortega says:

    @Keith I agree with you here. Seth is not saying go online, but rather speakers and conference organizers have to raise the bar in the conference realm.

    I’ll be bold enough to say that we at 360Conferences are already executing this new standard and have been for the past year. Read my response and case over here:
    http://360conferences.com/blog/2008/05/new-standard-of-conferenceswe-started.html

  4. Aral Balkan says:

    Hey Brooks,

    How the heck did I miss this post when you first wrote it? :) Thanks for the props for Singularity.

    I just have to clarify that Singularity is not an online conference, it’s a _global_ conference. The big difference here is that we have local conference hubs around the world, some being organized by venue sponsors like Yahoo! and the BBC and others — community hubs — being organized by community groups. People meet up _locally_ as part of a global event.

    We definitely use the Internet but it’s our communication medium. It’s what ties all the local groups together. Sure there will be people experiencing and interacting with the conference from the comfort of their own rooms — and some speakers will even be presenting from whichever hotel room they happen to be at the moment — but we are concentrating heavily on having a good speaker and audience presence at the various local hubs. I feel this is essential to the character of the conference.

    I truly feel that we are traversing some uncharted terrain here, building the first Conference 2.0, as it were. And I hope that other conferences follow suit because the type of conference we’re creating is environmentally friendly.

    Brooks, by the way, expect an email from me very soon. I want to talk to you guys about getting you involved with the conference :)

  5. [...] Brooks Andrus from Techsmith, whom I always end up having a lovely conversation with whenever I’m at a geek conference, wrote about the Singularity web conference a few months back in response to a post by Seth Godin titled The new standard for meetings and conferences. (Brooks, I hope you don’t mind that I stole your excellent graphic for the post.) [...]

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