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Conference Surfing

Or. why it's worth getting out of your geek shell and attending something totally different.

I've been at the American Association of Advertising Agencies Account Planning conference in Miami for the last couple days. Until now. I had only ever attended tech conferences - CFun. CFUnited. DEVCON/MAX. WebManiacs. etc. While I am technically here to support a client. I have been poking around and listening in on various conversations and learning a lot about a field that we can't help but to come in to contact with every single day. Serendipitous learning - the best kind!

For example. there was one workshop yesterday on learning from information architects. The IA field has absorbed ideas from many others and applied them quite successfully to the new problems created by technology. Now these attendees (account planners) are trying to siphon off the same concept and apply it to their field. Very cool! What does that do for advertising and what does it mean for the future of quantitative benchmarking for the effectiveness of advertising? Huge question. generates a ton more -- just great food for thought.

Also surprising (to me. anyway) was the use of Twitter [conference feed] and Flickr [pics]. I got lots of questions about what Twitter is and (more urgently) why anyone would ever want to use it both socially and professionally. Fortunately enough there were some recent tweets that I received that were great examples of both. It's fun. simple to use and (as i'm sure you've noticed) really cuts down on full-fledged blog activity. The less-relevant or elaborate thoughts now go to Twitter. leaving the soapbox effort for the blog world. Some folks had a hard time understanding that Twitter is fun. not nearly as important as oxygen. and we're all still figuring out just how it can be used most effectively. I guess the over-hyped talk about blogs made them somewhat skeptical about 1:many tech-initiated conversation. I have no idea how they'll use this to their advantage. but as long as we still have to approve follwers we'll be just fine!

So what have I really learned? The people I'm surrounded by down here are all frantically competing for my attention - and each others - in an increasingly saturated environment and want to use not only technology but the seriously old-school fields of psychology. mathematics and language to get it. Look at this picture for an example of where their heads are. One-many and many-many communication paths are still being explored with new edges and boundaries becoming the "next great thing." As a technologist. I'm using Twitter as a yardstick for who's really paying attention - if they know what it is. they're doing ok - even if they have zero intention of using it at all. You've got to look at this slide to see that the techies have created a monster that they're aware of and plan on using against us sooner rather than later. Their event horizon is 2010 - only a short 18 months away!

Anyway. this has been tremendously educational and has inspired me to find other conferences that are in some way driven by (but not ruled by) technology. Think about it: these people are technology and tech services consumers (aka potential customers). Where will you find more business. in a room full of people who do what you do or a room full of people who use the services you can provide while speaking their language?

I thought you'd say that. Happy surfing.

Comments (Comment Moderation is enabled. Your comment will not appear until approved.)
David's Gravatar I found that slide on media telling yet obvious in a sense. For instance. "Media will be everywhere". This indicates the AAAAAA folks still perceive the definition of media as TV. Newsprint and Radio. In my mind. media comes from medium; that is to say. it is a means of intervening (dictionary.com) or any type of method of communicating something. So. facebook posts. blogs. tweets and whatever comes next are - by my definition - part of the media. Media is not just the reports on TV. The distinction will be that traditional media once told us all information we wouldn't know. Now that has become so accessible that what is interesting in the next evolution. is the analysis and interpretation of the events. Lucky for us. this lies in the hands of anyone interested in participating.
# Posted By David | 7/23/08 2:01 PM

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CounterMarch Systems is a professional consulting firm specializing in Adobe technologies with a special focus on higher education.

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