I’m done with auto-follow on Twitter

Last DM

About 2 months ago I was introduced to a site called SocialToo.com. I created an account and added my Twitter credentials. I turned on the feature that would automatically follow anybody on twitter who started following me.

Yesterday, I canceled my account with SocialToo.com.

One feature they offered that I never used was the automatic direct message for new followers. They gave you a form field where you could craft a message that would be sent via direct message to every new person who follows you on Twitter. At first glance this seems like a cool feature. Send everybody a quick thank you for following. However, as Twitter grows, so do the amount of people who start to abuse features like this. Here was one of the DM’s I got the other day.
Last DM
This was the final straw for me. It set off the following series of actions:

1. Canceled account at SocialToo.com
2. Used friendorfollow.com to find out who I’m following who’s not following me.
3. Removed over 200 people I follow who started following me to get a follow-back and then stopped following me.

Up until last week my daily Twitter routine was this:
- Auto follow everybody who follows me.
- Each evening check out the profile, latest tweets and website for each new follower.
- Block spam-only twitter accounts from following me (which also unfollows them).

No more! Instead I’ll skip step 1 and move right on to step 2. I’ll follow back anybody who doesn’t appear spammy, has tweets on topics I’m interested in, doesn’t send out self-promotional links on more than 10% of their tweets. I will, of course, still block all spammy twitter accounts.

After 2 days of turning of my auto-follow and cleaning up my twitter follow list, I can honestly say that it’s removed quite a bit of stress. For some reason the spammy automatic DMs were really pissing me off. I’ll be happy if I never see another one!

(quick note: This post is in no way meant to suggest that socialtoo.com has anything to do with the spammy auto-dms. They simply provide a service that other people choose to take advantage of.)

Beer & Blog is going strong

bnb_head

It’s been about 6 weeks since our first Beer & Blog gathering and I am really excited about how the event is taking on a life of it’s own. It’s to the point now where it’s not just the core group of people who all met at WordCamp and decided to start this get together. We’re starting to see “friends of friends” stopping in to see what is going on each Thursday at the Freakin’ Frog. I think when they come in and see that we aren’t all sporting pocket-protectors, they seem to relax a bit and actually start to enjoy themselves.

Even though I am perfectly happy with the non-structured social atmosphere that B&B has taken on, I still like to use these events to learn bits and pieces from the people who are attending. I’m interested to see how it would go to do more of a formal topic driven conversation, but I don’t want to scare off any of the people who are here more for the beer and less for the blog. I’m hoping that we can find a happy medium. And, as much as I love the Freakin’ Frog, it’s certainly not the perfect spot for talking to a group of people. The music in the background is just loud enough that it makes it difficult to talk to more than a group of 5 or 10 people. You’d be almost shouting in order to present to a group of 40 which is about our average turnout these days.

Aside from what goes on at B&B, it’s also exciting to see outside events starting to take shape. A few weeks ago we went to a B&B lunch that was organized by @techguy because he’s not able to make it to the Freakin’ Frog on Thursday nights. Also, this Sunday @CineVegas is hosting the Beer and Blog “Black Ties Prohibited” Oscars party. I’m sure there will be many more events like this in the future. I was already thinking of sticking with the “B” theme and setting up a Beer & Blog & Bowling event. We’ll have to see how that pans out.

You can check out some photos from last night’s event on my flickr photostream or in the Beer and Blog Las Vegas flickr group.

So even if you aren’t a blogger or you don’t have a twitter account or you just aren’t technically savvy you should still come to the Freakin’ Frog to hang out with us. I promise, it’s not nearly as geeky as it sounds.

Good group + Good cause = Great Event!

twestival_head

Last night we went to the Revolution Lounge at the Mirage casino to take part in the first ever Twestival to raise awareness and money for Charity:Water. Las Vegas was one of roughly 175 cities around the world taking part in the Worldwide event that was organized around the Twitter community.

To give you a little background on Charity:Water, they are a non-profit organization that is bringing clean and safe drinking water to people in developing nations. Over the past few years they have raised over 7 million dollars and funded 1200+ water projects around the world. These projects range from hand-dug wells, deep wells, rainwater harvesting schemes and biosand filters.

The event last night was an absolute blast. The Revolution lounge has interactive tables that are touch sensitive. As you drag your hand across them, a built in screen will paint different objects across the table. Ours painted with flower petals while others used squares & circles and other random shapes. You can see a pic of the table here. Also on the tables they were scrolling all messages on Twitter that included the tag twestival. This of course meant that we would send tweets and then go back to staring at the table to watch our tweet scroll by. In this photo you can see my tweet being scrolled on the table. Of course I had to tweet about it, too. For a geek like me, the Revolution lounge was a very cool place to hang out!

The bar was serving a free drink called a Tweetini. It was basically a lemon drop with Blue Curacao added in. They were crazy-good. You could order other drinks as well, but they were not on the house so it’s no wonder I had 3 Tweetinies which made today at work a fair bit painful. After a few Tweetinies I took it upon myself to ask the DJ if we could “RickRoll this bitch.” He was kind enough to oblige and I made it back to the bar in time to hear the groaning of my friends as Rick Astley started belting out the hits.

If you weren’t able to make it to the Twestival with us last night, you can check out photos from Twestival events all over the world in the Flickr Twestival photo group. Or, if you’d like to get involved with the Charity:Water project, check out their site at charitywater.org/getinvolved/.

Big thanks to Manya for organizing the Las Vegas portion of the Twestival. She did a fantastic job and everybody in attendance had a great time.

25 Random Things About Me

25_things_header

I don’t think I can avoid this one any longer. Just about everybody I know has done the 25 Random things meme on Facebook. I figure it’s about time I jump on board with my own.

As Sarah said on her 25 random things post, this only makes up a small portion of who I am and the weirdness wrapped inside. I, too, may have to do another random things post in the future.

  1. I’m left handed and think it’s cool when I see other people writing with their left hand.
  2. I have more than 1 tattoo I forget about and get surprised when I see them.
  3. I have zero interest in finding/speaking to my biological father.
  4. In June, I’ll celebrate my 20th wedding anniversary.
  5. I changed my name when I turned 18.
  6. I hate it when somebody doesn’t believe something I’m saying.
  7. I don’t like wine or champagne AT ALL.
  8. I love the ocean but hate the beach (sand).
  9. I would love to someday be a published writer.
  10. I have zero interest in traveling to other countries.
  11. I dropped out of high school after the 9th grade (which I failed).
  12. Though I’ve never seen a doctor about it, I’m certain I have ADHD and OCD.
  13. I hate confrontations.
  14. I once broke both wrists at the same time by falling off a 6 foot wall.
  15. I love listening to live music, even if the band isn’t that good.
  16. One year I watched the movie Stripes almost every day after school.
  17. I had written up the plans for a Tivo-like device about 10 years before Tivo came out. Kicking myself for not patenting that one. Oops.
  18. If I hear or see somebody vomit, I have a VERY difficult time not throwing up, too.
  19. I had a flight scheduled (that I ended up skipping) that would have had me in the air at the exact time of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. My wife would have FREAKED OUT.
  20. I would rather have a bag of chips than any sort of sweets.
  21. When my daughter was born she didn’t breath for the first 30 seconds. I have never been so scared in my life.
  22. When I was on my way to get my first tattoo I was in a multi-car accident that totaled my car. I had called in sick to work that day.
  23. I have had skin cancer removed from my cheek and my back.
  24. I remember the fax number for a place I worked at over 10 years ago. I used the fax machine maybe 3 times ever.
  25. I know the lyrics to THOUSANDS of songs. But, if you ask me what the song is about, I usually have no idea.

… and now you know.

How Twitter could make money immediately

Dear Twitter,

I heard that you still aren’t making any money. I’m sorry to hear that. I have an idea how you could start making money right away and your users would love you for it, too. Build an iPhone app that doesn’t suck.

I know what you are going to say, “What about Twitterrific or Tweetie?” Sure, these programs are a good start, but there are things that you could provide that would make me want to shower you with money. Here are some examples.

Group Handling
I follow over 1500 people and it would be really handy to be able to group them and follow only a sub-set of these people while on my iPhone if I choose. Plus, I want to have the grouping information available on twitter.com AND on my iphone so I can add/edit/delete groups and the contacts in the groups from either location and have it update both.

Auto-Complete @reply & DM Names
When I want to send a message to somebody specific, I don’t want to have to type in the whole name every time. To message @toddhuish I should be able to type @to and by that time it would show me a fly-out of all people I follow starting with @to. This feature would also be nice if it was available at twitter.com as well.

Aside from these missing features, you’ll want to be sure to include the popular features handled by other apps like Tweetie. Multiple accounts, tabs for @reply and DM messages, stored searches, etc…

If you make this app available for sale through the app store, I guarantee you’d be on the top seller list in no time at all. I’d certainly pay $2.99 for it and I know many others who would do the same.

Let me know if I can be of any further assistance.

Best regards,

John Hawkins
@vegasgeek

The birth of Beer & Blog Las Vegas

“Who would have thought that all this would have grown out of WordCamp:Las Vegas?” That’s a question I’ve been asked several times over the past few weeks while attending Beer & Blog.

If you haven’t heard, Beer & Blog is a weekly meeting that takes place on Thursday nights at the Freakin’ Frog. A group of Las Vegas blogging and social media enthusiasts get together to talk about all aspects of blogging and social networking.

The idea for beer & blog was introduced to me by Aaron Hockley, who I met while organizing the WordCamp:Las Vegas conference. Aaron was organizing a similar conference in Oregon and mentioned to me that he was interested in speaking on the topic of Beer & Blog and how it has helped to explode the tech scene up in Oregon. After hearing his explanation, I knew this would be an excellent opportunity to bring the Las Vegas blogging community together and hopefully start our own group. I invited Aaron to speak at WordCamp, and to say that his message was well received would be a tremendous understatement! Before the end of the conference, one of the attendees, Jackie Mason, had already contacted the folks at Beer & Blog and we were set up with our own Las Vegas chapter. 4 short days later, using Twitter as the main source of promotion, we had our first Beer & Blog event with roughly 30 people in attendance.

I’ve tried in the past to coordinate weekly/monthly meetings to talk about blogging over beers, but it has been difficult to gain interest and the idea would end up being scrapped. So why is working this time? I think the answer is WordCamp. At WordCamp we had a room FULL of people who are already interested in blogging and were taking steps to better their blogging through education from other like-minded individuals. When Aaron introduced them all to the idea of Beer & Blog, the lightbulb went on over all their heads. I had a dozen people come up to me asking if we were going to get something like that going here in Las Vegas. The interest was definitely there. All it needed now was somebody to step up and set the date. Jackie stepped up, made it happen and the rest, as they say, is history.

While it’s too early to tell how the group will hold together over the long haul, the early results are impressive. We had 30 people in attendance that first week, a little over 20 people the second week and a very impressive 40 person turn-out last night.

So, to answer that question, “Who would have thought…?”, the answer is me. I knew Las Vegas had a passionate group of bloggers and I’m thrilled that we are finding each other and sharing our knowledge over a pint of beer.

Come join us and help put the “Social” back in social networking.

Just say no to Facebook apps

Last week I asked for your opinion on using Twitter updates to automatically feed my Facebook status updates. I received a lot of great feedback and when all was said and done I decided I decided that the auto-updates should stop. I removed the app from Facebook leaving me with exactly zero add-on applications installed on Facebook.

On average I receive 5-10 requests to add new applications to my Facebook account each week. Movie quizzes, causes, calendars, pass a drink, top friends and so, so many more. Recently several of my family members have been sending me request for an app that says we’re related. I treat these the exact same way I treat the rest; I click the button that says “ignore.” If you’ve sent me an app request and I’ve ignored it, please don’t be offended. You are not alone. I do the same to everybody.

I use Facebook to connect with far off friends and family. When I log in I like to see what my friends and family are up to. I don’t want to have to sort through pages and pages of movie quizzes and badges exclaiming that you’ve sent me a digital teddy bear in order to get to what I really want to see. So for me, keeping my Facebook account clean from the clutter of 100 add-on apps is priority one.

I only bring this up because a friend messaged me asking why I never accept the apps he sends me. I figured it would only be a matter of time before others would ask. Especially some family members. Hopefully they read my blog. So once again, do not be offended. I’m not ignoring your app. I’m ignoring everybody’s apps.

How many Facebook apps do you have installed? How many of them are even remotely useful?

Opinions wanted: Twitter updates to Facebook. Good or bad?

A while back I found a Facebook app that automatically updates my Facebook status with the text from every tweet I send to Twitter. I have seen both positive and negative comments about this practice, but I’m curious how you feel about it. But, before you answer, let me give you some of my thoughts on the subject:

Pros of updating Facebook with Twitter content
- Automated. Once I installed the app, I haven’t had to do anything since.
- Facebook gets attention. I don’t have time throughout the day to log in and update Facebook. Especially while at work. But, it takes just a few seconds to fire off a tweet.
- I have several Facebook friends who are not on twitter. This way, they get to stay in the loop.
- When I receive a comment to a Facebook message (sent from Twitter), it reminds me to log in and be active on my Facebook account.

Cons of updating Facebook with Twitter content
- Duplicate content. For people who follow me on Twitter AND I’m friends with on Facebook, I could see how it could get annoying to see the same content twice.
- Random updates. Face it, Twitter is all about the minutia of day-to-day life. I’m not sure it’s the best use of a Facebook status update.
- Impersonal. If you think of each network as a complete and separate group of people, the question is, “Don’t they both deserve individual attention?”

So, what do you think, is automatically updating the Facebook status with Twitter updates a good or bad thing?

WordCamp:Las Vegas 2009 wrap-up

I knew it was going to take me a few days before I was ready to write this. But, the time has come. It’s time to say everything I have to say about organizing and running a WordCamp event.

Be warned, this post is going to be LONG and perhaps boring. I’m not writing it for you. I’m writing it for me as a road map so that when I set out to do this thing again next year, I’ll have something to look back on and perhaps avoid some of the pitfalls along the way.

First, let me say that I am very proud of how well WordCamp:Las Vegas turned out. I have never attended a WordCamp event before, so I had nothing to base my event on. At some point I was talking to somebody who said that “organizing a WordCamp allows you to put together a schedule that you would like to see at an event.” This couldn’t be more spot-on. I basically hand-picked the speakers I wanted to be there based on who I would have liked to have seen. It’s sorta like picking my own all-star team.

People have asked me 100 times if I picked that specific weekend because I knew CES/Affiliate Summit was going to be in town. The answer is, no, I didn’t. When I first found out that both of these shows were surrounding “my” weekend, I was a little bummed out. I thought it would be a bad thing. Wow, was I wrong. Because these other two events had already scheduled to bring out some of the big name speakers, I was able to borrow some of their time to have them speak at WordCamp. I seriously doubt Chris Brogan, Jim Kukral or Dave Taylor would have been flying out to Las Vegas on their dime to speak for free at a conference for 150 people. No way, no how!

Which brings up another point, local talent. Many of the previous WordCamp events have been heavy on local bloggers coming in to speak. The Vegas event had only one local speaker and the rest were in from out of town. I don’t know if this is a good thing or a bad thing, but given the list of big names we had on the agenda, I don’t see how it could have been bad.

OK, enough rambling, let’s break this down…

Set a Date
As I stated before, I got really lucky with my timing. Don’t leave it to luck. Do some research and see what else is going on. Not just in your area. Check the WordCamp website to see if there are other events happening the same day you’ve chosen. If so, pick a different day. But, if there is an event going on in your area that you could leverage in to some extra exposure or extra attendees, try to schedule it to fit in.

You should also decide early on if you are going to make it a one or two day event. In my head, I had always seen this event as two days, but I have no idea what made me think of it that way. I’m glad I chose two days, but it really did add an extra layer of complexity. If everything is on one day, there’s only so many things that can go wrong. If it’s two days, that’s twice as many chances.

Don’t forget, if you schedule well in advance you’ll have a better shot at getting a couple WordPress/Automattic staffers to attend/speak.

Enlist Help Early
This was my biggest mistake. I took on too much. But, honestly, I thought that more people would be interested in being involved with organizing the event. But, it just didn’t happen that way. I DO NOT suggest you try to organize an event on your own. Make sure that you have 2 or 3 people who are as passionate about the event as you are before you agree to it. Then, divide up the work. One person can work on finding a location while others can work on equipment, sponsors, speakers and advertising. Taking on this entire event by myself was just stupid. I’m really lucky to have pulled it all together and I don’t think I could do it again.

(FYI – I have already received about 10 offers from people to assist with next year’s planning. I think they were just waiting to see if this event was a total flop before adding their name to it. ;) I’m half kidding here.)

Don’t forget you are also going to need help the day of the event. Plan on 2 or 3 people to work the registration desk the morning of the event. Somebody to shoot photographs, somebody to shoot video, sound, tech, somebody to check badges at the door, etc… I had a staff of 8 (including myself) and that seemed to be just about right for the size of my group.

Venue
Las Vegas has more conference space than any other city in the world, I believe. That does not mean that they give it away. A brand new casino 15 minutes from The Strip offered me a 50×50 room for $5,000 per day. I politely told them where they could stick their podium and kept looking. I wasn’t able to find a library, business or school/university (these were my first choices on where to host the event) that was willing or able to handle a group the size I had in mind, so I was forced to look at more traditional conference spaces. Nearly every casino has conference space, but one of the main issues is Union casinos. If they are a union casino, this means that bringing in my own equipment is a big pain. And, renting equipment from the casino is a HUGE cost. I was given the name and number of a lady at Palace Station by a friend who had recently ran his own conference at Palace Station. The cost of running the event at Palace Station was far and away better than anything I had been quoted to that point. It was so much better, when I was given the price over the phone I yelled out “Book it immediately!”

The event planning staff at Palace Station is fantastic. They were helpful, gave timely information, provided suggestions and were just flat-out easy to work with. I would happily work with them again in a heartbeat. (Thanks, Page! You Rock!)

One word of caution. Before you agree to guarantee a block of rooms to be sold, BE SURE you have a good understanding of how many people you will have coming and staying in the hotel. This had the potential to be a very costly expense as I overestimated the number of rooms that would be needed. Thankfully, things evened out at the end, but it would be better to reserve fewer rooms and let the people who book early benefit from the discount.

Registration
One of the previous WordCamp websites had used eventbrite.com to handle their registrations, so I followed suit. I couldn’t be happier. The money gets deposited directly in to your Paypal account. I have a Paypal debit card so I was able to use that to pay for expenses along the way. Plus, the eventbrite site has all sorts of features like tracking links and affiliate links that could help in having other people promote the event. Sadly, I didn’t find these features until it was too late to make use of them. But, I know where they are for next time.

DO NOT assume that you will get people to sign up for your event early. I opened registration in September. We had 146 pre-registered attendees. 80 of those signed up in the last 10 days. This is a bit of human nature at work, but it really is a pain in the ass for an event organizer. It’s impossible to know how much of anything you need to order. For example, I had capped the registrations at 200. So, I have to plan for 200 people showing up. When it came time to place an order for t-shirts, I ordered 2 dozen extra and my final shirt order was roughly 235. I am now left with roughly 65 shirts. That’s roughly a $300 expense that was unneeded.

One way to combat this issue would be to heavily discount the price of the tickets for people who sign up more than 4 weeks in advance. This will give you plenty of time to order shirts/printed material. As the event gets closer, raise the price. For walk-ups, the price should be even higher. This may go against the “keep it cheap” mentality of WordCamp, but when you are the one footing the bill for the event, you need to watch the bottom line.

Speakers
Finding people to speak at an event is a bit of work. First you need to find people willing to speak. Then, you need to figure out if the content they have to present is going to fit your agenda. Having 5 people come in and all talk about SEO would get really boring. Obviously you will want to have a mix of different types of speakers so that your event will appeal to a wider variety of attendees. Weather you decide to go for a “local” feel, or if you are able to attract speakers from all over the world, the trick is to get the word out. Start emailing potential speakers WAY in advance. The sooner the better. You want to get commitments from speakers early so you can leverage their help in promoting the event. One a speaker commits to your event, ask them to write a blog post or send twitter messages to help you promote the event. They don’t want to speak to an empty conference hall either.

You will of course want to contact the folks at WordPress to see if you can get a couple of WordPress/Automattic staffers to come speak. I was lucky enough to get Matt Mullenweg out to our event along with programmer Joseph Scott. Again, the trick is to ask early to give them plenty of time to schedule it.

If your speakers are going to use a slide presentation, require them to email them to you at least 48 hours in advance. This sounds easy, but many of the speakers write their speech the night before the event. Guys like Jim Kukral perform best under that last minute pressure. But, if you can get all the slide decks on to one computer before the event, you won’t run in to the delays that we had between each speaker. Also, if people are going to be using PowerPoint, BUY POWERPOINT. I mistakenly thought that I would be able to get away with using OpenOffice.org PowerPoint equivalent. While it is just fine if you create the presentation in OpenOffice, trying to import PowerPoint presentations sucked. They looked like crap and we had to end up using a different laptop. This caused even more headaches along the way.

One thing that I didn’t do, but will definitely do next time, is set a price for for speakers who want to come in to speak about a product. This year I had 4 or 5 product related sessions. I let each one of them come in because I felt that they had something to offer to bloggers in attendance. I felt that even if the specific app wasn’t exactly what they might be looking for, it could set off ideas for them that would benefit them down the line. That said, next year there will be a set cost to come in to do a product demo.

Agenda
It’s not always up to you as to when people are going to speak. I had 3 speakers who all requested to speak on Saturday because of scheduling conflicts on Sunday. Still, try to space out the “big names”. Plus, leave some time to let attendees have access to the speakers. The networking portion of the event is critical. Had to do over again, I’d have scheduled more time for networking.

It has been suggested to me to schedule a morning and afternoon break, along with lunch. I think this is a good idea and something I’ll keep in mind for next time. I’m thinking something along the lines of keynote/opening speaker, then a break and then a few sessions before it’s time for lunch. Same basic schedule after lunch.

If possible, schedule activities unrelated to the event. This is something I missed out on and am very sad about. I would have loved to schedule a photo-walk for the Las Vegas Strip for the night before the event. As it turns out I was extraordinarily busy the night before the event, but that doesn’t mean the other attendees couldn’t have gone out shooting. These events should be social. Do what you can to promote that aspect of it and make sure you have somebody else there to run the activity in case you are busy with preparations.

Schedule a staff dinner and include the speakers. This can be done the night before or the night of the event. But again, make it social. As the organizer of the event, I ran around all day during the event making sure things were where they needed to be. This kept me from sitting in on sessions and from speaking to some people who I would have liked to have spent more time with. A staff/speaker dinner would have been a great time to get to know everybody a little bit.

Sponsors
Several people asked me how I got the sponsors to donate money or products to give away. It’s simple really, I asked. I asked a lot. Then, I asked some more. Guess what, a lot of people told me no. The economy sucks so people were watching their budgets. You have got to be ready to hear the word no. Don’t take it personally, just move on.

Try to find local businesses who can donate. Try to find online companies that have synergies with WordPress or bloggers in general. Hosting facilities, designers, plugin developers, etc… Let them know what you are doing and then make it inexpensive for them to donate. Sure, finding one company to throw $5,000 would be nice, but you are far more likely to have somebody agree to a $200 donation. Don’t discount what you are giving them in return. Our site got a fair bit of traffic and there were several other blogs that linked back to the site. These donations have the ability to drive some decent traffic back to the sponsor’s website over time. I’ll personally be leaving the WordCamp:Las Vegas website in tact until it’s time to start planning next years. My sponsors are getting 8-10 months of advertising for their minor contribution. Remind them of that when you are asking for a donation.

Make it easy for them to donate. Have them send payment via paypal. Again, this makes it easy to pay for expenses via a paypal debit card.

One other way to help sponsor the event would be through affiliate links on your WordCamp website. This isn’t something I chose to do, but it could be an option. I’m just throwing it out there…

Costs
So, what does it cost to run a WordCamp. I’ll bet you get a different response from everybody you ask.

Today on Twitter I saw somebody say that WordCamp was sponsored by WordPress. This is very much untrue. Sure, they help promote the event through blog posts, the WordCamp.org website and some goodies to give away, but they do not provide a single dollar of support. I have no problem with this, I’m just clearing it up so you don’t think it’s as easy as saying, “I want to organize a WordCamp event” and all of a sudden money comes falling out of the WordPress tree. You organize it, you pay for it.

My out of pocket costs to run WordCamp:Las Vegas was roughly $4,500. I then received sponsorship money and registration money that evened it all out. I am quite lucky in that I was able to cover the entire cost of the event.

It’s funny, as I went along, more and more things kept coming up to spend money on. I STRONGLY suggest you put together an Excel spreadsheet and keep track of everything you spend money on. You will be surprised how quickly it adds up.

Here’s a list along with links to vendors I used (where appropriate):

  • Conference Room
  • T-shirts for attendees Jimmy’s Jam T-Shirts
  • Lanyards/Badge holders nametag.com
  • Badges and podium sign Vertical Printing
  • Banner 24hbanner.com
  • Food/drinks (if you plan to provide it)
  • Business Permit (required for Las Vegas. Be sure to check.)
  • WiFi
  • Power outlets and extension cords
  • Office supplies (pens, markers, clip boards, paper for hand-outs, etc, etc)
  • Projector & Screen
  • Adapters for laptop -> projector connections
  • Wireless microphones / speakers (or PA system)
  • Tips (It’s Vegas, we tip everybody)

The companies that I linked to above all did a great job for me. I wouldn’t have linked to them if they didn’t. If you decide to use them for your event, please tell them that you found them through us. Perhaps we can build a relationship and we can all benefit on some group pricing down the line.

Promotion
Getting the word out for an event like this isn’t as easy as you might think. It takes work. And a lot of word of mouth. But, here are a few things you should do:

  • Create a dedicated site for the event (example: lasvegaswordcamp.com
  • Email EVERYBODY in your address book and ask that they tell everybody they know
  • Send a message on every social media site you are a part of (myspace, facebook, etc…)
  • List your event on upcoming.yahoo.com
  • Contact Lorelle as she’s the queen of WordCamp promotion
  • Blog about the event on your site every week or so
  • On the dedicated site, write a blog post for every event that happens during planning (confirmed speaker/sponsor and things like that)
  • Try to get your local media to do a story about it
  • Ask each of the speakers to blog and tweet about it
  • Ask attendees to blog/tweet about it
  • Ask sponsors to blog/tweet about it
  • Hang a flier in coffee houses or wherever will let you

You can not talk about the event enough. The more people you tell about it, the better your chances of getting people to register.

Well, I think that about covers it. Hopefully this will help you create your own WordCamp in your area. If there is an area that you want me to elaborate on, please leave a comment and I’ll follow-up.

See you at WordCamp:Las Vegas 2010!