Archive for April, 2009

Wendy Lea has worked as a bootstrap entrepreneur, corporate executive, and angel investor over the last 25 years. She recently joined GetSatisfaction.com as CEO. She shares her advice about when to admit that you don’t understand, raising capital, and how female leaders can authentically manage effectively.

More interviews from Women 2.0 are available on our podcast page.

Community partner of Web 2.0 Expo, Women 2.0 is committed to increasing the number of women entrepreneurs starting high growth ventures by providing the resources, network, and knowledge for the launch and growth of their company.

iPhone or Blackberry?

Google or Yahoo?

X-Files or X-Prize?

Little green men, or microorganisms?

Intelligent Design?

Crowdsourcing?

Global warming?

E = mc2

Web 2.0?

FORA.tv?

Jennifer Pahlka

Lots of words come to mind to describe last week: affirming, social, interesting, fun, and helpful come to mind. I’m most struck by how positive the attendees were in general, even when things went wrong; I think that can be credited in part to the pleasure of being reminded that this market continues to grow and evolve in interesting and powerful ways despite the state of our economy. We needed reminding.

Words aside, we’ve had several requests for numbers. Those are reassuring as well. We had somewhere in the neighborhood of 8300 people through the doors at the event. (I will update this post later in the week when we get final confirmation of our attendance from our registration manager.) This number includes Expo Only attendees and exhibitors, and it does not include folks who registered but didn’t show up; we only count those who actually picked up a badge. That is down from about 10,000 attendees last year, but it appears that the folks who showed up this year were overall a more serious crowd; we seem to have lost those who lacked budgets or even viable business models.

So who was there? These numbers reflect our roster from two weeks out from the event, and the final numbers haven’t been crunched yet, but we asked attendees four questions when they registered, and here is how they answered.

What role(s) do you play? (attendees were asked to check all that apply)

BusinessStrategy 46.6%
Development 41.3%
Marketing 40.4%
Design/User Experience 34.6%
Product Management 26.9%
Web Operations 25.4%
Content 22%
IT 18.5%
Community Management 16.5%
Other

Which of the following is closest to your job title?

President/CEO/Owner 24.7%
Staff 18.3%
Manager 18.3%
Director 14.3%
Vice President 6.3%
COO/CFO/CIO/CTO/CSO/CXO/CMO 6%
Student 4.7%
Other 7.3%

How long has your current company been in business?

10+ years 38.2%
2-5 years 20.9%
6-10 years 14.6%
Less then 2 years 19.5%
N/A 6.7%

How many employees are at your company?

1 to 9 33%
10 to 99 22.9%
100 to 999 15.1%
1,000 to 9999 9.4%
10,000 or more 13.5%
Don’t know 6.2%

If there’s one word that comes to mind looking at these numbers, it’s DIVERSE. Web 2.0 isn’t about coding or marketing or business models, it’s all of the above. It’s not about startups or enterprise, it’s across the spectrum. It’s also not just about business; several of the top-rated sessions last week were in our Government 2.0 track, so increasingly it’s about applying the principles of Web 2.0 to governing.

Want two more numbers? 5/3 – 5/6. The dates of Web 2.0 Expo San Francisco 2010. That’s May 3 – 6, if you don’t mind a word in there.

It is so satisfying to see comments like this living on your homepage. Thank you everyone for your amazing participation at Web 2.0 Expo San Francisco last week. There was an inspiring group of quality people, sessions, speakers, media, exhibitors and overall participants.

feedback

Do you have feedback for us? TELL US!

1.Conference attendees, please leave us your feedback about the conference via www.web2expo.com/sf/survey and enter in to a chance to win a Wii! (Please use the same login you set up at registration.)

2. Session attendees, please leave your feedback, questions and comments to speakers via the attendee network. So simple: click the session and leave a comment. Tada!

3. General attendee feedback: Email us at sf-idea@web2expo.com.

4. Holla at us via this blog. All comments welcome.

Interviewed by John Battelle, Founder and Chairman of Federated Media.

Suzanne Axtell

As the San Francisco edition of Web 2.0 Expo winds down (what a whirlwind four days it’s been!) the Call for Participation for the second edition of Web 2.0 Expo New York has opened. Please consider submitting a proposal to speak! This is another great opportunity to put your ideas and projects in front of a very savvy and connected audience, and we hope to see you there.

Like the SF show, we’ll continue to explore the theme of “The Power of Less”–how to best use the tools and principles of Web 2.0 technologies to innovate and stay competitive in a challenging (to say the least) economy. 

Topics include: 

- Landscape & Strategy 

- Marketing & Community 

- Design & User Experience 

- Development 

- Web 2.0 at Work 

- Government 2.0 

- Mobile

- Social Media 

Deadline for proposals is May 26. Visit the Web 2.0 Expo NY proposals page for more details and a link to the submission form. 

Note that the committee received over 1,000 proposals for Web 2.0 Expo SF, and we’re expecting a similar pool for NY. 

Program co-chair Jen Pahlka wrote up some great tips for successfully submitting a proposal specifically for Web 2.0 Expo.

In addition, below is advice that we often give to prospective speakers:

- Be authentic! Your peers need real-world scenarios they can use. Please submit original presentation ideas that focus on knowledge transfer, and engaging and relevant examples.

- Include as much detail about the planned presentation as possible. The more we know about what you plan to present and why it matters, the better.

- Be thorough! If you are proposing a panel tell us who else would be on it. If you are going to have a release let us know. If you feel this is something that hasn’t been covered before let us know.

- Keep it free of marketing.

- Keep the audience in mind: they’re technical, professional, and already pretty smart.

- Clearly identify the level of the talk: is it for beginners to the topic, or for gurus? What knowledge should people have when they come to the presentation?

- Give it a simple and straightforward title or name: Fancy and clever titles or descriptions make it harder for people (committee and attendees) to figure out what you’re really talking about

- Context is important. If your presentation is about something truly ground-breaking, earth-shattering, and new, it will be helpful to the reviewers if you describe it in terms of things that attendees might already know of.

- Limit the scope of the talk: in 45 minutes, you won’t be able to cover Everything about Widget Framework X. Instead, pick a useful aspect, or a particular technique, or walk through a simple program.

- Explain why people will want to attend: is the framework gaining traction? Is the app critical to modern systems? Will they learn how to deploy it, program it, or just what it is?

- Warmed-over talks from some conference circuit are less likely to be appealing. The conference has a limited number of slots, and if attendees can see the same talk somewhere else, why should they come see you at this one? If you speak at a lot of events, be sure to note why this presentation is different.

- Don’t assume that your company’s name buys you cred. If you’re talking about something important that you have specific knowledge of because of what your company does, spell that out in the description.

- Present something relevant. If you’re presenting a new way to do something that others have been doing for a decade or more, you need an angle on it that’s fresh or an explanation for why it’s important now. The hot things are hot, the cold things are cold, but there are interesting problems in almost everything. One of your challenges as a proposer is to demonstrate that you understand that attendees might need an extra reason to pay attention to something that they might otherwise think of as “settled.”

- Avoid taking a scatter-shot approach to proposals if you submit more than one or two. Be focused, have something important to say on a worthwhile topic, and sell the topic (not just yourself).

Good luck, and we hope to see you there!

Firstly – we’d like to say SORRY to those inconvenienced yesterday by Jared Spool’s absence for his scheduled session. There was some confusion, something came up and we didn’t have any warning so we missed providing an announcement.

But since Jared is probably the most effective, knowledgeable communicator on the subject of user interface design, we’ve rescheduled him to present this afternoon. If you’re interested and available please join his session at 3:50pm today in Room 2010: What makes a design seem intuitive? 

If you’re looking for speaker presentations – you can find the most recent ones on our homepage or cruise through all the ones we’ve received here

If you don’t find what you’re looking for, it’s likely because the speaker hasn’t posted them. But you can check Slideshare yourself in case we missed it.

But if you find it, let us know (via Twitter, a comment, Facebook) so we can add it for everyone’s viewing pleasure (crowdsourced content, rock!)

As for videos, we film only the keynotes and they can be found off our homepage or our web2expo.blip.tv channel (actually, ALL our keynotes from years past can be found on that channel too).

Thanks for reading. Hope you enjoy our conference content.

Justin Jarvis, Community Manager, GTEC

Having issues with the wireless at Web 2.0 Expo?  Switch to the 802.11a mode (sorry, does not apply to Macs).  

For WindowsXP or Windows Vista.

1) In Control Panel, select the System icon or the Device Manager icon (depending on your operating version).
2) In the Hardware tab under System Manager, Select Device Manager.
3) From the Device Manager screen, choose your Wireless Adapter under the “Network Adapters” drop down menu. 
4) In the “Advanced” tab, under “Wireless Mode” choose the appropriate mode you want your Wireless Adapter to use to connect to the network.  In this case, 802.11a only.
5) Reconnect to “Web2.0″ network
6) Blog/Tweet away

Permalink: http://blog.web2expo.com/2009/04/wireless_help/

Justin Jarvis, Community Manager, GTEC

On the last day of Web 2.0 Expo San Francisco 2009 use your Expo Pass to take advantage of Keynotes, the Expo floor and the Government 2.0 track.

Expo Hall Hours
10:30am – 2:00pm

Full list of exhibitors

Keynotes
8:45am – 3rd Level Ballroom
-Heather Gold (the Heather Gold Show)
-Vic Gundotra (Google)
-Scott Heiferman (Meetup)
-Jake Nickell (Threadless)
-Jeffrey Kalmikoff (Threadless)
-Peter Hershberg (Reprise Media)
-Jeff Veen (Small Batch, Inc.)

Full Keynote Schedule

Government 2.0 Track – Open to all Attendees
We believe the principles and practices of Web 2.0 can help bring increased government transparency, public involvement and reduced cost to government. The Government 2.0 track seeks to help the Web 2.0 community understand how they can bring their skills and knowledge to bear on this critical problem, whether as individuals seeking to enable change or companies looking for a new business opportunity.

Making Government 2.0 a Reality: A Citizen’s Guide to Essential Reforms
-11:00am – Room 2014

Navigating the Maze: How to Sell to the Public Sector
-1:30pm – Room 2014

Towards a More Open Union: Ways for Us to Change America
-2:40pm – Room 2014

my.barackobama.com: The Secrets of Obama’s New Media Juggernaut
-3:50pm – Room 2014

Sponsored Session
Enterprise Mashups Technical Deep Dive – John Boezeman (IBM)
-11:00am – Room 2016

Full Schedule of Sponsored Sessions

Sunlight Labs Hackathon
9:00am-5:00pm – Room 2018
The project chosen for the Hackathon is the Fifty State Project, an openly available structured database of state legislation.

More information about the Sunlight Labs Hackathon

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