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Category Archives: Conferences
Hey, we recognize that face!
Today I opened up a mass email from South by Southwest only to discover a familiar face featured prominently – our own Hillary Brown!
Hillary has been chosen to moderate a panel called Landing a Music Career in Flyover Country during the music portion of the Austin, Texas-based festival. She’ll be representing On Pitch, the music marketing firm that she co-founded right here in Des Moines.
Speaking at SXSW is a huge honor and it’s no easy task to get selected. Big congratulations to Hillary on this accomplishment.
Is it March yet?
Update, 9:00pm: The Des Moines Register published an article with more details about the panel.
SXSW panel ideas from Iowa
It’s SXSW Panel Picker time of year again, and I wanted to take a moment to create a list of panel ideas submitted by Iowans. Silicon Prairie News also has a nice wrap-up of panels from the Midwest that you can check out here.
The voting process is now open, so click through the titles below, give them a read, and vote if you think they’re worthy.
Social Marketing Lessons Learned on the Farm – Nathan T. Wright (That’s me!)
Landing A Music Career in Flyover Country – Hillary Brown and Jill Haverkamp, On Pitch
How Farmers Get Serious Business Done With Mobile – Jeff Caldwell, Meredith Corporation
Real-Time Streams Need Real-Time Feedback – Daniel Shipton, BitMethod
How Can Artists Turn Web Hits Into Dollars? – Cat Rocketship & Scott (Kubie) Rocketship, make\break
The Legalities Behind APIs and Mashups – Brett Trout, Brett J. Trout, P.C.
Screenwriting from Iowa (and Other Unlikely Places) – Scott Smith, River Run Productions
In the Future, Everyone Will Be a Filmmaker – Scott Smith, River Run Productions
Rich Browser-Based Templating Through Open Source Collaboration – Neil Roberts, BitMethod
Content for Multi-Channel Consumers: Earn Affinity, Reap Rewards – Heather Rast, Insights and Ingenuity
Resistance is Futile! Assimilating Local Marketing – Deb Brown, Debworks
Big thanks to Becky McCray and Kelly Rivard who helped me refine my ideas throughout this process.
So, did I miss any brilliant Iowans? Let me know. And if you’ve got a panel that you’re behind, or just want to share one that sounds interesting, please leave a comment below – regardless of where you live.
Good luck to everyone who submitted an idea, and we’ll see you in Austin in March 2011!
Some thoughts on Big Omaha 2010
I’m back from the Big Omaha conference and wanted to share a few thoughts. First – this is a world-class event. I’m very impressed with what Jeff Slobotski and Dusty Davidson (and all involved) have accomplished in just a few short years through hard work, humility and sheer force of will. Congrats to them, and to the city of Omaha.
You don’t attend this conference to learn, and it’s not really an “educational track” kind of event to begin with. You attend because you want to be inspired to accomplish bigger, better things in work and in life. We all need this from time to time – whether you’re working in a cubicle or you’re a couple of years into your own endeavors. We fall into ruts. Big Omaha brings in (and connects you with) the people who give you a swift kick in the ass.
I met Melody McCloskey, who founded and bootstrapped the brilliant, niche web service StyleSeat. Also briefly chatted with Matt Mullenweg, who needs no introduction – to WordPress fans, at least. It’s always a delight to see Gary Vaynerchuk in action on stage. This is probably the 16th time I’ve seen him talk and it never, ever gets old.
I knew bits and pieces of the charity: water story going in, but not the full details. I loved hearing Scott Harrison‘s story of building a charity with a business mentality, and the importance he places on branding and aesthetic (which is typically lacking in the non-profit space). Also great: Dennis Crowley‘s career path and his thoughts on being acquired: “I would rather run Foursquare into the ground than take a company-ending deal.”
Attend in 2011. Especially if you’re suffering from of “conference fatigue.” Big Omaha is efficient, compact, affordable and every moment is high-quality.
Were you there this year? What are your thoughts on the conference? Who did you most enjoying meeting and/or getting to see speak?





Back to reality.




