Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category





Glue Conference Pics

May 14, 2009     |     posted by gluecon



Hi Everyone! Just uploaded Gluecon pics to Flickr. The pics can also be viewed on the Glucon home page.





No, I’m not nuts

January 14, 2009     |     posted by gluecon



A couple of threads seem to be converging around “tech conferences” these days, so I’m feeling prompted to add to the mix.

Computerworld is reporting about Gartner canceling two “flagship” events, MacWorld losing Apple for 2010, Novell canceling Brainshare, and general doom and gloom in the tech conference space. We’re also seeing the apparent shuttering of the European Dreamforce and a 22% drop in attendance at CES. In the midst of all of this, we’re launching Glue.

All of which begs the question: Am I nuts? (Several people have asked me this.)

The answer, quite simply, is no.

First, let me preface my explanation by positing that there is a big difference between a “tradeshow” and a “conference.” I view it as a spectrum with “tradeshow” on one side and “conference” on the other.

A tradeshow is about scalability and size. Tradeshows are *massive* undertakings (and I should disclose that I have never personally operated a tradeshow, though I have worked on them in the past). Tradeshows invariably end up viewing the exhibitors and sponsors as their customers because that is where the vast majority of their revenue comes from. The result (try as the organizers might) tends to be a forum for vendor pitches and product launches — which aren’t bad in and of themselves, but they do dictate a certain dynamic for attendees. The dynamic is less about intimate networking, community and real interaction, and more about buzz, volume of sales leads and parties.

Conferences, on the other hand, are a bit different. At the farthest end of the spectrum, a conference would derive NO revenue from sponsors and exist solely on attendee registrations. I’ve only personally ever seen this done by Esther Dyson with PC Forum (my favorite conference of all time). Most conferences (Glue and Defrag included) can’t simply rely on attendee registrations, so they also have a mix of sponsor revenue thrown in. This is where the key to understanding what makes a “good” conference “good” lies. A good conference is defined by the fact that the organizer explicitly realizes that even though sponsors give them revenue, they are NOT the customer (that’s a hard pill to swallow — especially for sponsors — but it is always the truth). The customer of a conference is the attendee. There’s just no way around that. A conference lives and dies through fostering a community of attendees that derive value from the content, interaction and community-building that takes place at said conference. And that’s the hard part.

I’m a pretty good salesperson when it comes to conferences. I work my butt off, and it doesn’t always come easy, but I’m good at it. However, the effort I put into sales is not “brain power” effort - it’s just brute-force work. The real “brain power” effort for Glue (and Defrag) comes in the content, “attendee” participation (I prefer “participant” over attendee), and subsequent community that gets built. For that, I lean heavily on *you* (all of you). That is the key to a good conference.

Now, it’s not the only key. Logistics count (I thank the heavens every day for my wife Kim, who handles logistics). Details matter. Knowing how to run the operation matters. But above all else, community matters.

All of which leads to the inevitable question: how do you build community?

I wish I had some nice, neat answer. I don’t. Community building is flat-out hard work. Beyond that, it’s hard work that takes *time*, the passion to care about the conference topic, and a nearly obsessive desire to engage with real people (not sales leads, real people). Companies that succeed as sponsors of conferences understand that. They put as much effort into “engagement” as they spend. Same goes for me. Why am I on twitter? Because it is an amazing way to engage with people. Why do I blog? It’s certainly not to hear myself think. Why am I always on the lookout for tools like Eventvue? Community, community, community.

Am I saying that everyone should come (or will come) to Glue? Of course not. But if the topic is appropriate to your work (or your passion, or whatever), then you absolutely should come. Reason being: Every sponsor at Glue, every attendee at Glue, and everyone involved in organizing Glue is coming at this with just as much “skin in the game” as you are. We’re all in this together — building something that isn’t quite there yet; figuring out the problems that aren’t correctly scoped; helping each other find solutions via new business, partnerships, or even hallway hack sessions; forming (dare I say it?) a “community.”

That is why tradeshows will fail, while Glue succeeds. That’s why some conferences will feel bland, while Glue is packed with excitement and innovation. That’s what matters - hard work, innovation, and all of you. ;-)

I hope you’ll join us.  (Eric gets off his soapbox and promises this will be the only post of this kind between now and Glue.)





Welcome to Glue!

March 19, 2008     |     posted by gluecon



Welcome to Glue! Glue is a conference (and blog) about the idea that now that the web is the platform, enterprise IT folks are faced with a problem similar to the enterprise application integration hell they faced in the late 90’s. Namely, integrating web applications; or more correctly, loosely coupling, abstracting and sharing  the data, process and workflow that is common to those applications. Some folks have described the idea as “Interop for the Web.” Others have called it “web oriented architecture.” No matter what you call it, we hope to be a resource for these ideas.

So, first questions first: When is Glue? Well, that’s the thing. We haven’t decided yet. We’ve set this site up well in advance of when we plan to have the conference (early 09) because we want to gather your feedback. Glue will be sometime in early 2009. In the meantime, we’ll be looking for every way possible to engage with people (architects, integrators, vendors, etc) around the ideas that make up Glue.

 

And what are those ideas? The categories are a bit fluid, but so far, we’ve identified the following:

  • Enterprise Glue: A “web oriented architecture” via mashups and RSS 
  • Marketing Glue: The abstraction of the management of ad platforms into a common interface
  • Social Network Glue: The movement toward cross-network interoperability and data sharing
  • Interface Glue: Cross-platform, cross-browser technologies like Silverlight and Apollo
  • Messaging Glue: Tools that are evolving for meta-messaging
  • Identity Glue: Reputation, user-centric identity and web SSO
  • OS Glue: Cross-operating system runtimes
  • Infrastructure Glue: Utility computing that binds back-end services 

    What are we missing? That’s the first place that you can help us build Glue…drop a note in comments.  





  • Hello world!

    March 18, 2008     |     posted by gluecon



    Welcome to WordPress.

    This is your first post.

    Edit or delete it,

    then start blogging!