Posts tagged social media conferences
The end of SXSW as we know it?
Oct 25th
For me, there are two MUST go-to events in the digital marketing space — Social Slam (naturally) and SXSW.
If Social Slam is friendly, inexpensive and accessible, Austin’s SXSW Festival is its alter-ego! But SXSW is also unparalleled in its showcase of cutting edge content and ideas, its potential for networking with every high flyer in the business, and the diversity of its content.
It is also a painful experience. SXSW is frightfully expensive to attend. The venues are so spread out across the city of Austin that you cannot hope to see a fraction of what you want to see. But most of all, SXSW is CROWDED.
To anyone visiting this event, it’s apparent that SXSW has FAR outgrown the city of Austin’s ability to handle it. The hotel rooms are sold out six months in advance. The convention center corridors are so jammed you can hardly move, let alone find a quiet place to talk. And the sessions are so packed you can’t even attend most of the popular keynotes. Many people sit on the floor and watch popular speeches on TV monitors. Pretty ridiculous.
So it’s not entirely surprising that the event appears to be easing out of Austin for the ultimate convention site — Las Vegas. Here is the announcement from yesterday:
Announcing SXSW V2V!
We are excited to announce SXSW V2V, the newest addition to the SXSW family of events. SXSW V2V is an extension and re-imagining of the 26-year-old Austin event with an emphasis on the creative spark that drives entrepreneurial innovation.
The startup and venture capital space is of major interest to all the creative industries that are at the core of the SXSW family of events. SXSW V2V features four days of informative panels and workshops, inspirational speakers, intensive mentor and coaching programs, networking events and receptions, pitch competitions and startup showcases. This new event will offer an intimate environment for innovators and entrepreneurs across all creative industries learn the skills, make the connections and find the inspiration to take their ideas and talents to the next level. If you are involved in building an app, a service, a business, a brand or a community, then this event is for you.
Join us for this excitement-packed, four-day event Sunday August 11, 2013 through Wednesday August 14, 2013 at The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada.
SXSW is commonly referred to as the “World Series of Start-ups.” Is that title now moving to a new Las Vegas event?
I think much of the appeal of SXSW is the electricity driven by the start-up community. Going to SXSW without the start-ups will be like eating cake without the icing. If SXSW migrates the start-up frenzy to a new Las Vegas event the Austin conference will lose its soul. Bootstrapping entrepreneurs are going to have to place a bet because they more than likely will not be able to attend two different (and expensive) events to try to get attention.
It’s not entirely a surprise that SXSW is snapping its funky Austin roots but it makes me wonder if the entire conference is imploding from its success like a star that grows so large that it starts collapsing on itself.
Note: After this post ran, I was contacted by Hugh Forrest, Director of SXSW Interactive, who wanted to clarify the strategy behind Las Vegas versus Austin. I asked him specifically to address the question, “If I was bootstrapping a new business and had to choose between Austin and Las Vegas, which would I choose and why?” Here is his response:
We are very excited about all the excitement that the SXSW V2V announcement generated last week. Las Vegas has a small but fast-growing community of startups and digital creatives — so being a part of this emerging scene in August 2013 offers lots of amazing possibilities.
That said, the SXSW V2V event will NOT preclude SXSW Interactive from hosting dozens and dozens of startup-related programing in March 2013 in Austin. For a list of the 50+ startup-related panels and solo presentations currently planned for spring 2013 in Austin, please see this blog post from the SXSW website on October 15 — http://bit.ly/WdUppm
In short, we feel that there is enough momentum / energy in this startup ecosystem to fuel two very different events in two very different cities (Austin and Las Vegas).
If you are a startup, should you attend the event in Austin or Las Vegas (or both)? That really depends on your particular situation. If your schedule is already booked for spring 2013, then you now have another option to receive the same kind of great startup-related programming by attending the SXSW V2V event in August in Las Vegas.
Social Media meet-ups you won’t want to miss
Mar 27th
Nothing is more fun for me than meeting up with friends from the {grow} community in real life. I would love to meet you at some of the awesome social media meetings and conferences coming up! Here’s where you will find me over the next few weeks.
- March 28 at 2 p.m. I will be presenting a free webinar on social influence thanks to my friends at MLT Creative. To register, click here: MLT Creative.
- March 29 I will be a Panel Leader on the “The future of information” Post Advertising Summit, in New York City. Interesting blend of cutting edge workshops and futuristic thinking!
- April 05 Hey Ohio! I’ll be giving the keynote address at the American Advertising Federation conference in Dayton, OH
- April 13 Jason Falls has put together an awesome line-up for his latest Social Media Explorer Event (Nashville) including Amber Naslund and Tom Webster. I’ll be giving a keynote speech on the Six Layers of Customer Digital Engagement.
- April 16 London Calling! Come meet me at the TechMap Conference. I’m told they already have a record enrollment for this meeting!
- April 17 Meet-up and keynote at Digital Surrey in Surrey, UK.
- April 18 Guest Lectures, Oxford University. Heck, I’d sweep the floor just to be there!
- April 19 Another fun meeting in London. Sign up for an intimate meeting at the Digital Lounge Speaker Series.
- April 27 Do not miss Social Slam in Knoxville, TN. Many people consider this the finest one-day social media event in the country. It’s jam-packed with good stuff and it’s cheap. Plus you get to meet Gini Dietrich, Mitch Joel and hear the debut of my speech on social influence.
- May 8 Social Media Examiner’s Social Media Success Summit, (affiliate link) is an online whiz-bang of a conference. My talk on Twitter best practices follows Guy Kawasaki. Just sayin’ y’all. Mike Stelzner has created and amazing and affordable event.
- May 17 My first trip to Minneapolis in a long time! Come on out and meet me at the Minnesota American Marketing Association conference. I think they are giving out a bunch of Return On Influence books!
- June 01 I’ll be returning to my alma mater to deliver a stunning Keynote speech at the Integrate 2012 Conference. West Virginia University has one of the top integrated marketing programs in the country so check it out!
- June 07 My debut at the Blog World and New Media Expo. More than 100 Speakers, 3 Days of Education and a Tradeshow Exploding with New Media Resources. Will be rockin’ the halls in New York City with a keynote speech. See you there?
In the fall, I am tentatively scheduled to appear at Content Marketing World in Columbus around Sept. 5, a new social media event in Wales the week of Sept. 16 and at a professional procurement event in Houston in October. My schedule is kept up to date on the website speaking page.
It’s so rewarding and fun to meet friends in real life. I hope to find a way to meet you soon!
Social Slam Reveals Spring Surprises
Sep 13th
In 2011, Social Slam set the standard for a value-oriented, first-class social media conference. We featured speakers from around the country including Jay Baer, CK Kerley and Brian Winter.
More than 95% of the 430 attendees gave the conference a “satisfied” or “very satisfied” rating and many people claimed it was the best conference they had ever attended.
How are we going to top that?
We have a number of surprises to reveal over the coming months, but today, we would like to announce our first keynote speaker for the April 27, 2012 conference in Knoxville, TN: Mitch Joel!
Mitch is one of the most important and influential leaders in the field of social media marketing. When Google wanted to explain online marketing to the top brands in the world, they brought Mitch Joel to the Googleplex in Mountain View, California. Marketing Magazine dubbed him the “Rock Star of Digital Marketing” and called him, “one of North America’s leading digital visionaries.” Most recently, Mitch was named one of iMedia’s 25 Internet Marketing Leaders and Innovators in the world.
He is president of digital agency Twist Image, with offices in Montreal and Toronto. His book, Six Pixels of Separation, was one of the seminal books in the field and still one of the most-acclaimed and best-selling of all-time.
His blog is in the AdAge Power 50 marketing blogs of the world and his podcast regularly features the most famous authors, consultants and pioneers in the field of marketing.
But wait … there’s more.
To uphold Social Slam’s vision of creating a national event that showcases the brightest NEW voices in the field, we are creating several innovative panels and “slams” that will put a spotlight on up and coming thinkers in social media marketing. If you’re interested in applying, please visit the Social Slam website and fill out an application before the end of October!
We have two more national-level keynote speakers already booked and there will be more announcements on that in coming weeks!
Tickets will go on sale December 01. Last year, the ticket capacity of 430 was sold out weeks before the event. This year, the maximum attendance has been capped at 600 but we are still expecting a sell-out so plan to get your tickets early for this premier social media networking event!
By the way, this is an all-volunteer event run by the Social Media Club of Knoxville, which is why we can keep the prices under $100 per ticket. It is a great gathering place for the {grow} community and I look forward to seeing you there in April!
Social Slam recap: Lessons from 430 house guests
Apr 18th
I had an incredible experience last week that had quite an impact on me.
I founded and helped host (along with Social Media Club Knoxville) a social media conference called Social Slam with more than 400 attendees from 17 states and Canada. It is probably the biggest social-media-related experience of my life so I wanted to share some lessons learned. (And here is fun and lively round-up of the event from Journalist Jack Lail).
Ship it. Seth Godin writes a lot about just “shipping the product.” That was definitely the approach we took on this event. We didn’t it have it all thought out from the beginning. We had a vision for a world-class conference that was affordable and inclusive, and we just went for it. This was a bit out of my box — putting my brand on the line with such public risk.
Although the event had sold out weeks in advance, and the planning was smooth, I really could not conceptualize what was about to happen until I walked into the convention center hall and saw a room filled with 430 chairs. Here is what I said out loud: ”Holy shit.” What if this sucked? Suddenly I felt the weight of 430 house guests — many of them close friends — on my shoulders. All it would take was one messed-up wi-fi connection, one last-minute speaker illness, or a million different possibilities that were out of my control to turn anticipation into angst … or even disaster. It was a scary feeling. But as Seth says, sometimes you just have to start and push fear aside. In this case, it worked.
When things go wrong. – Of course things went wrong. There were plenty of last minute kinks to our plans but as long as we could keep the kinks under the covers it all looked perfect to participants. When you get down to the wire, you just have to overcome and get it done. There was huge value in being able to make decisions on-the-spot without having to get approval from a company or committee.

An event of this size took hundreds of hours of volunteer work to handle everything from logistics to stuffing 400 gift bags!
Empowering others. The logistics and planning for an event like this is daunting. Thankfully we had an outstanding team of volunteers led by the awesome Nicole Denton and Brenna DeLeo of the Knoxville Social Media Club. From my corporate days I learned to delegate and empower but of course it’s a little riskier in a volunteer situation. Surrounding yourself with reliable and trust-worthy partners is essential in a venture like this.
Social giveth and social taketh – People flew in from all over the country based solely on word of mouth from the social web. Our advertising budget was zero. So in that respect, social media was very generous. As you would expect, people were tweeting like mad all day but a few characters who were not even attending the event hijacked the conference hashtag for their own “comedic” agenda. Who knows why? A sad and strange way to get attention I guess? It hurt because dozens of people had sacrificed countless hours to make this event shine for our city. But it was a good experience for me because I caught a glimpse of what companies must go through when they have to watch helplessly as somebody terrorizes their brand and their hard work. But it only lasted briefly and the tweets from the people actually attending the event were awesome. From this, I have a better appreciation of the peril of having no control of your brand on the social web.
The emotion of connection. This event was a celebration on many levels but it was also a homecoming for the {grow} community. Dozens of people who are loyal readers — and who I have never previously met — came to enjoy the event. If you have read this blog for awhile, you may remember a post I wrote about Jenn Whinnem, one of my first Twitter friends. Jenn flew in from Connecticut and when I first saw her walk through the door, there were tears in my eyes. This scene was repeated many times as friend after friend came into town to join the celebration. I was surprised at how emotional this was for me. Don’t let anybody tell you that you can’t build real relationships through the social web. For most people, the networking was just as valuable as the conference content.
The power of passion. Every speaker, panelist, moderator and worker volunteered their time and even paid their own way to present because they believed in what we were trying to accomplish — create an inclusive showcase for diverse and fresh perspectives on social media marketing. I cannot even describe how humbled I feel and indebted to these good and generous people. Yes, there is a lot of crap on the social web. But you also have the choice to surround yourself with bright lights. Here are some of the lights in my tribe that made Social Slam rock:
- Jay Baer
- Jeremy Floyd
- Anne Deeter Gallaher
- Glen Gilmore
- Amy Howell
- Jen Kane
- CK Kerley
- Billy Mitchell
- Chad Parizman
- Trey Pennington
- Shane Rhyne
- Ryan Sauers
- Jayme Soulati
- Jeremy Victor
- Tom Webster
- Brian Winter
- Deb Weinstein
Was it a success? We’re still collecting feedback, but many people commented that it was the best social media conference they have attended anywhere. We had many out of town guests who were impressed with our beautiful city of Knoxville. I’m proud that I was able to highlight deserving speakers and successfully lead this inaugural event — my primary goal. On a personal level, it was extremely rewarding to achieve something like this. It will take some time to assess what this meant for my career.
What’s next? Well, we got this ball rolling now! We’ve announced the next event for April 27, 2012 so if you missed it, mark you calendars for a truly amazing and inspirational event. And if you attended this year … well, you ain’t seen nothing yet!










You’re in marketing for one reason: Grow.
Grow your company, reputation, customers, impact, profits. Grow yourself. This is a community that will help. It will stretch your mind, connect you to fascinating people, and provide some fun along the way. I am so glad you’re here.
-Mark Schaefer

