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What was your best experience at a conference? Worst?
17 points by dwgetjg 3765 days ago
4 comments

I find my best conference experiences aren't the sessions themselves, but happen in the hallways or at optional side-events. Two conferences I've been to had skydiving as an optional activity, and I've found that's been a great way to make new friends & long lasting connections. Probably something about sharing a near-death experience together.

Most profitable experience was complaining in the hallway to another attendee about the previous speaker. We bonded over our griping & they became a client of mine a couple of years later (even though that wasn't an intention I'd had at the time).

Worst experience was a conference whose topics changed after I bought the tickets, flying halfway around the world for it, then struggling to stay awake for the final sessions of the day. I actually skipped the next conference day, but the attendees were great people & became good friends, so I still got my money's worth.

[Gratuitous plug: I maintain a list of conferences for indie developers, digital nomads and other bootstrapper/DIY types at http://indieconference.com/ I mainly use it as a list of justifiable excuses for travel.]

Great list! Thanks!
Worst: Smalltalk/networking. I'm pretty social (perhaps now), but it took a lot (attending conferences, 2 years+, once per month) to feel comfortable approaching and talking to strangers - and the crazy thing was I was in a buy-side position, not sell-side, so I was waiting for others to strike a conversation. Now, 10 years later after getting over the hump, it is much easier. The biggest thing for me was getting comfortable talking to a couple of really genuine sales people. And genuine meant getting to know them very gradually over these 2+ years.

1. If a conference organiser, it's really useful to not just put people in a room with canapes and drinks for a 'networking session' but to actually plan something that can connect people. An event where people can create meaningful conversation, not have flippant conversation.

2. If a participant, read-up by listening to some excellent podcasts by manager-tools.com - they cover tips in a far better way than I could do in a quick HN post (it's free, with a vast range of content, not just for managers).

So you'd say that conferences could be great if people have numerous meaningful conversations, but that doesn't happen as often as you'd like?
The best conferences I had are the ones I barely attended any talks in them. Mostly because I met some very interesting people outside and the discussions/debates were more interesting, I've made some great friendships there.

My worst was actually a Droidcon, where most the talks were a word-by-word repeated versions I already saw on Youtube.

How did you go about finding people to talk to?
The first time was quite scary, but it was a challenge I set for myself.

There was this group that were louder and generally "more alive" than the rest. So I approached them, and lurked for a while, after a few minutes I said hi and introduced myself, and that's it!

After that I threw myself out of my comfort zone at every event. My goal was to meet as many interesting people as I could, and I did.

I was young back then, probably one of the youngest at those kind of events (that probably helped).

Best: Dr. Anita Sengupta from NASA JPL, keynote speaker at GOTO Chicago, speaking inspirationally about her work on Mars entry systems, and also about women in engineering. If I didn't have a family, I'd be very tempted to learn whatever I had to learn (and take the paycut I'd have to take) to work at NASA and be a part of something big.
Agreed, saw her at YOW last year. Here's the presentation: http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=YvMQfqLdeWw