Swag
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And then, when finished, have a reference whitepaper PDF to hand out that runs through the project so that no one needs to take notes or pay really close attention during the talk.
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@IRJ said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@IRJ said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@IRJ said:
I also think this a moot point. You have a better chance hitting a long range target with a rifle vs a shotgun. IMO small events should focus on the meat, not the sides dishes.
You'd be surprised how much it is the side dishes that attract people.
Do those type of people truly create value? As you mentioned earlier they punk out vendors for free swag, and rarely look for useful IT information. They rarely make decisions for their business and are just there for the party.
If the value is "being able to have a conference."
Maybe IT training is better than a "conference"
Frankly I like this idea, but it's probably pretty limiting. The deep dive idea Danielle has been mentioning seemed more like training to me, which is highly appealing. The social aspect, the ability to meet my (hopefully) peers to gather knowledge that comes through socialization as well as training is just as appealing.
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@Dashrender said:
@IRJ said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@IRJ said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@IRJ said:
I also think this a moot point. You have a better chance hitting a long range target with a rifle vs a shotgun. IMO small events should focus on the meat, not the sides dishes.
You'd be surprised how much it is the side dishes that attract people.
Do those type of people truly create value? As you mentioned earlier they punk out vendors for free swag, and rarely look for useful IT information. They rarely make decisions for their business and are just there for the party.
If the value is "being able to have a conference."
Maybe IT training is better than a "conference"
Frankly I like this idea, but it's probably pretty limiting. The deep dive idea Danielle has been mentioning seemed more like training to me, which is highly appealing. The social aspect, the ability to meet my (hopefully) peers to gather knowledge that comes through socialization as well as training is just as appealing.
Training would be awesome but will be highly challenging. Considering training will need to be broadly applicable and able to be done in about one hour per session, only very special topics will be able to be covered. Go into the sessions thread and suggest some ideas. I know a PKI one was mentioned.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@IRJ said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@IRJ said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@IRJ said:
I also think this a moot point. You have a better chance hitting a long range target with a rifle vs a shotgun. IMO small events should focus on the meat, not the sides dishes.
You'd be surprised how much it is the side dishes that attract people.
Do those type of people truly create value? As you mentioned earlier they punk out vendors for free swag, and rarely look for useful IT information. They rarely make decisions for their business and are just there for the party.
If the value is "being able to have a conference."
Maybe IT training is better than a "conference"
Frankly I like this idea, but it's probably pretty limiting. The deep dive idea Danielle has been mentioning seemed more like training to me, which is highly appealing. The social aspect, the ability to meet my (hopefully) peers to gather knowledge that comes through socialization as well as training is just as appealing.
Training would be awesome but will be highly challenging. Considering training will need to be broadly applicable and able to be done in about one hour per session, only very special topics will be able to be covered. Go into the sessions thread and suggest some ideas. I know a PKI one was mentioned.
One hour? @Minion-Queen has been saying that sessions will be in the 3-6 hour time frame.
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@coliver said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@IRJ said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@IRJ said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@IRJ said:
I also think this a moot point. You have a better chance hitting a long range target with a rifle vs a shotgun. IMO small events should focus on the meat, not the sides dishes.
You'd be surprised how much it is the side dishes that attract people.
Do those type of people truly create value? As you mentioned earlier they punk out vendors for free swag, and rarely look for useful IT information. They rarely make decisions for their business and are just there for the party.
If the value is "being able to have a conference."
Maybe IT training is better than a "conference"
Frankly I like this idea, but it's probably pretty limiting. The deep dive idea Danielle has been mentioning seemed more like training to me, which is highly appealing. The social aspect, the ability to meet my (hopefully) peers to gather knowledge that comes through socialization as well as training is just as appealing.
Training would be awesome but will be highly challenging. Considering training will need to be broadly applicable and able to be done in about one hour per session, only very special topics will be able to be covered. Go into the sessions thread and suggest some ideas. I know a PKI one was mentioned.
One hour? @Minion-Queen has been saying that sessions will be in the 3-6 hour time frame.
Yeah, that could never happen. I asked her why she was saying that That would mean two sessions for the whole conference, that would never work for a conference. It would literally just be a "random boot camp" - that would never fly.
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I think she was trying to say two six hours days of one hour technical sessions but said it in a way that all of us were certain that she said two six hour days training on a single subject.
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3 to 6 hours per training item but not all in one session. 1 hour sessions at max.
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@scottalanmiller said:
You need a written policy.
Spoken like a true CIO!
"No one shall be permitted to hand out stinky cheeses, or cheese-like things, in or around said conference. All stinky cheeses must immediately be reported to IT for proper quarantine and decontamination. Failure to report things like stinky cheeses up to and including (the following list is not exhaustive) Limburger, Roquefort, Epoisses, Pont l’Eveque, etc... will result in immediate expulsion from and future banning from said conference."
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@AVI-NetworkGuy said:
@scottalanmiller said:
You need a written policy.
Spoken like a true CIO!
"No one shall be permitted to hand out stinky cheeses, or cheese-like things, in or around said conference. All stinky cheeses must immediately be reported to IT for proper quarantine and decontamination. Failure to report things like stinky cheeses up to and including (the following list is not exhaustive) Limburger, Roquefort, Epoisses, Pont l’Eveque, etc... will result in immediate expulsion from and future banning from said conference."
haha.. that sounds like a challenge!
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@Minion-Queen said:
3 to 6 hours per training item but not all in one session. 1 hour sessions at max.
More like tracks. Although even tracks would be problematic because they would require that they overlap and would turn into the equivalent of single sessions with coffee and bio breaks. Sessions have to be essentially atomic or else people will be "trapped" in the track of choice and unable to miss things in the middle.
Conferences cannot be training sessions like boot camps or classes, it's just not feasible. It undermines the entire concept and value that a conference provides. There is a reason why no conference does this.
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I prefer ENTERPRISE server parts like Adaptec RAID controllers.....
But hey that's just me
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@DustinB3403 said:
I prefer ENTERPRISE server parts like Adaptec RAID controllers.....
But hey that's just me
Not just you.
May I join the club? -
I use vendor USB sticks almost exclusively. I boot machines from them, I use them for file transfers. They tend to stick around for a long time.
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Really bad swag idea.... a key. A week later and people are still trying to figure out why they got a key and now that we've figured out it was something to do with a vendor booth.... no one seems to know WHAT it was, only that it didn't work well.
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Looking at that thread.... so no one is really sure what the key even was?
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Some thing it was eFolder, some think it was SoftLayer, I think that there was a third option too.
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It was the Vendor right next to BOX. There was a tool box with a padlock on it to try and open. Not sure who the Vendor was though
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I'm convinced at this point that no one knows.
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I still had the app on my phone. It was Efolder.
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That was an in-effective way to do a prize. No one has known who it was. If I didn't remember who they were next to, we would probably still not know.