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conferences

People attend conferences and events for education, entertainment and engagement – a desire to engage in meaningful conversation with other attendees and with presenters.

Gary Vaynerchuck’s presentation at LeWeb sparked a blog post on Why Livestreaming your conference is a no-brainer.  His followup interview with Gianfranco Chicco extended my thinking on the value of the conference / event experience to attendees.

Perhaps the highlight of Gary’s presentation at Le Web was his interaction with Loic LeMeur, founder and host of Le Web who said: “[Le Web] is not a conference, it’s a community” to which Gary exploded with this remark “If this is a f*%king community, why aren’t we doing Q&A?!”

I highly recommend checking out Gary’s full conversation with @Loic but be prepared, if you haven’t seen Gary Vee before, he uses the #F word at least a half dozen times in his presentation.

The future of Conferences

Successful Events can be measured by how successfully they balance the three E’s.

  • Education,
  • Entertainment
  • Engagement

Technology has made access to information free.  Education can help attendees put the ideas and information to use in a meaningful hands-on sort of way.  This demands smaller breakout group sizes and meaningful interaction with presenters. This is why the unconference / barcamp learning environment has been such a successful event formula.

The Q & A forum advocated for by @garyvee is a good one, and the ability of the presenter to dance on their feet and provide great value for the audience will require recruiting speakers who know their stuff backwards and forwards, understand the needs of their audience and are comfortable in a “Bring it on” environment.

This clearly isn’t the entire spectrum of presenters who took the stage at #leweb, or any other conference or event you have recently attended. Some of the brightest lights in social media and tourism – sadly, are poor presenters on stage and do not engage their audience.

Entertainment and Performance Matter too

Gary’s points taken into consideration, some presentations are performances. Lawrence Lessig comes to mind. Give me a front row seat for one of Larry’s presentations and I don’t want to interact or engage with him.  Although the online version of his presentations will fail to fully capture the value he brings to every presentation I urge you to give him a few minutes to see what the Stanford Law professor brings to the stage.  We need more like him.

Rethinking Conferences and Events: Put the Three E’s front and center

I think the large conference / event format itself may be broken. Smaller breakout groups are really valuable and providing access for Q & A and authentic engagement is much more valuable than panel discussions because attendees can get exactly what they came for.

Big names will put bums in seats, but the measures of success that matter most to attendees will always be the richness of audience engagement and off-stage social interactions.

Are your attendees getting the education, entertainment and engagement they desire?  Consider asking this question to gauge feedback at your next event:

Did you get what you came for?

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Upcoming Conferences

I’m delighted to be hosting Ontario’s Digital Economy in Huntsville, Ontario – October 1-3, 2008. While there are no Tourism Keys workshop events scheduled this autumn, I’m keeping busy with some exciting projects this fall. It all kicks off with this conference that will showcase inspiring ways technology is transforming communities. I’m really looking forward to the sustainability and community transformation threads that run through this conference.

I’ve never hosted a conference before, so if you’ve got any tips I’d be happy to learn from readers of Tourism Keys.

Ontario’s Digital Economy Conference will be of particular interest to business and sector associations, community and economic development organizations, all levels of government and their agencies, academics, SME’s and ICT companies. If you represent one or more of these groups in Ontario, join me at Deerhurst for this event.
Ontario's Digital Economy

After that I join my pal, Celes Davar for My Manitoulin Experience, Oct 7-9, 2008. Later in October, Nancy Arsenault from Royal Roads, University Faculty of Tourism & Hospitality Management join us in Newfoundland for two more GMIST Edge of the Wedge training workshops.  Holy cow, this will be the 15th and 16th times we’ve taught this course over the past four years! These three day workshops promise business and tourism community transformation with Tourism Experience Development and E-Marketing at their core.  Yes, anyone in the tourism industry in Canada can attend these 3 day courses in Gros Morne National Park.  Of course we keep making the content current, how else could we call it Edge of the Wedge!

I’ve also got a stop in Digby, Nova Scotia for a two day economic development and e-marketing workshop at the end of November.

What I love about these events is that they are hands-on, inspiring and for many people and communities transformational!

So as you see, it’s a busy fall. If you can’t join me at one of these events, I hope you are finding a few things to tinker with as you enhance your Web presence.

ps. I’m presenting An Inconvenient Truth, at the Regional Conservation Exhibition in Callander, Ontario this weekend, September 11th to the 13th. If you are near North Bay this weekend, come out and learn a bit about sustainability and climate change.  Living off-the-grid, you’ve got to know this topic is near and dear to my heart.

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