Attendees mingle and network between sessions.
I had the pleasure of attending the sold-out third annual Frederick New Media and Technology Conference on February 24 (photo of me presenting here). The location was good, the WiFi worked well, and the conversations were awesome.
If I had one complaint, it was that there was too much content happening simultaneously. I often had to choose between competing sessions and missed out on some great stuff, including my friend Beth Schillaci’s session on mobile and Whitney Hahn’s discussion on using video.
That said, here are my top five takeaways:
1. Your conference doesn’t need a keynote speaker. FredNMT3 opened up the traditional keynote slot to morning networking, and it gave everyone (okay, me) an opportunity to meet new people and reconnect with old friends.
2. Lots of people know very little about social media. That’s okay. They want to learn. Which means that we need to stop talking about the ubiquity of social media and spend more time teaching people how to apply social media strategies and tools to grow their businesses.
3. In a session about building online communities, Ali Allage talked about incentiving members to be productive, helpful, and relevant. He explained that, in one community, he had created a points system and special benefits to encourage people to provide meaningful contributions. This is a useful way to think about turning a thread of “great point” and “I agree” comments into a discussion.
4. Christopher Penn conducted a terrific session on e-mail marketing. He talked a lot about testing, and recommended using Google’s Search, Wonder Wheel, and Webmaster tools to identify the words (and terms) that people actually use. Penn also pointed out that engagement is the new whitelist (i.e., solid click-through rates mean your content is less likely to be marked as spam) and reminded us to make our calls to action big and obvious (think big red button). Oh, and those annoying pop-up forms that ask you to sign up? Yup, they work.
5. A well-designed closing session will keep people in their seats and engaged. Jessica Hibbard, who organized the conference, accomplished this with a rapid-fire session featuring 10 speakers, three minutes each, talking about 10 less-well-known social tech tools we should know about. I’ll give you a rundown on those in a separate post.
Were you at FredNMT? What was your top takeaway?
Photo by Shashi Bellamkonda, Social Media Swami, Network Solutions.
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You can see my slides from my presentation on Mobile with Beth Schillaci here – http://www.slideshare.net/jonmikelbailey/wood-street-frederick-new-media-and-tech-3-mobile-seminar
I know Beth has her’s somewhere, Beth?
Thanks, Jon, for stopping by and adding the link. This will definitely be useful for everyone who might have missed your presentation.
Daria Steigman recently posted..5 Takeaways from FredNMT3
Thanks for your great presentation too. There was a lot of great content which did make for some tough decisions as to what to attend. I’m already looking forward to next year’s event.
Beth Schillaci recently posted..How Does Your Site Look on Mobile
Hi Beth — Next year, maybe we can organize the session schedule so that our must-attend sessions are sequential. (Well, if it were all about us, that is.
)
Daria Steigman recently posted..5 Takeaways from FredNMT3
I attended last year but couldn’t this year. I appreciate your recap. Sounds like I missed another great conference.
Hi Shannon–Sorry you couldn’t make it. It WAS a great conference (smart content and good conversations).
Daria Steigman recently posted..4 Reasons to Use SlideShare
Thanks so much for attending and presenting … It was a great day, and I was also really happy with the keynote-less schedule. Glad it worked for others, too!
Jess–Awesome event! I’m glad I was able to participate.