by rudd on 9/16/11, 2:42 PM with 20 comments
by nikcub on 9/16/11, 4:53 PM
This includes pre-planning:
+ Get a list of journalists that will be at the event and email them beforehand. Don't just mass-mail a pro forma press release.
+ Track down bloggers from that list that you think may be interested in your product (because they have written about a competitor, or have written a feature on the space) and tweet them or email them a quick intro and tell them you will be at the conference
+ Do the same for investors. A simple tweet like "@vc would love to grab a few minutes with you at TC Disrupt to show you a demo of our product which is xyz etc.". Attending a conference is a great intro to cold emailing or tweeting somebody
+ Plaster your website, blog, twitter etc. with information about the conference and where you can be found. Include clear contact details. I would go as far as to place contact details on the front page of your site (or a separate conference dedicated page which is clearly linked to from the frontpage), along with your photos (so people remember you). This is so when somebody from the conference lands on your site they remember you and can find an easy way to get in touch with you.
During the conference:
+ Use the time you have at the conference to book demos with people you know will be there beforehand.
+ Don't just sit and wait at your demo table. Be pro-active by having one person constantly out and about on the conference floor introducing themselves to people and handing out cards
+ Be memorable - plaster yourself in your brand and color with t-shirts or shirts. Have a gimmick such as handing out sweets. One desk at TC Disrupt had a basketball hoop with prizes. I always seem to remember the companies that look good and are out and about.
+ Make it very clear what your intentions are - press, fundraising, hiring, partnerships, etc. Have a 30 second pitch for each one of these, a 30 second demo, and then a 4-5 minute pitch and a 4-5 minute demo. Take down contact details and place a note beside each contact you get
+ Attend all the after-parties
Post-Conference:
+ Attendee's are inundated with information during the 2-3 days of the conference. Have a way to remind them of who you are and what you do after the conference. Take down their email. Don't just be another business card in a pile of business cards. Don't assume that a journalist or investor remembers who you are when you email followup - always re-introduce yourself
Disclaimer: former techcrunch employee
by fleaflicker on 9/16/11, 4:26 PM
He has a strong personal brand that has been cultivated for a decade.
by kristiandupont on 9/16/11, 8:20 PM
If you launch something and have a large following like Joel, lots of people will see it. For me, the "one chance of making a first impression" isn't that important because very few people are going to get that first (and bad) impression. For me, the feedback is of higher value and losing maybe a few hundred potential customers is not a serious threat. But what would happen if, say, Steve Jobs announced a poorly iterated new product? Millions would try it out and two things would happen: 1) they would hate it and never try it again -- the first-impression thing. But more importantly, 2) Steves reality distortion field would lose many energy-points (or whatever those run on).
If Joel "officially" launches a three weeks old web page with an input element and a submit button, it could damage the personal brand he has worked hard to establish. But if you are not a celebrity, and your ego can handle it, it's possible that you are better off with the launch early strategy..
by mhp on 9/16/11, 3:09 PM
by mountaineer on 9/16/11, 3:46 PM
by killion on 9/16/11, 5:08 PM
Or it could have been the Sprinkles cupcakes we handed out.
by brianwillis on 9/16/11, 10:27 PM
Ain't that the truth. I shipped some code last week, and then spent some time at a customer's site demoing the new features and doing one-on-one training. It's a real buzz to see people use the stuff you made. It's easy to lose sight of that feeling when sitting in your air-conditioned beige office, divorced and detached from the realities that your users face, but when someone hugs you because of all the time and energy the code you just wrote will save them, it really validates what we do.
by fbnt on 9/16/11, 4:31 PM
by dmk23 on 9/16/11, 10:34 PM
by unohoo on 9/16/11, 6:51 PM
by medinism on 9/17/11, 7:05 AM
by jagatiyer on 9/16/11, 3:39 PM
by pitdesi on 9/16/11, 3:32 PM
Another question is: Should you go to a conference like TCDisrupt but present at Startup alley?
We (FeeFighters) did that. We aren't launching anything sexy that TC would like (We are in payments and even if you are making money and have saved businesses (including Fog Creek) $75million it isn't sexy unless Jack Dorsey is running the show) so we didn't bother applying to Disrupt.
We're launching next week at Finovate instead. So we decided to present at Startup Alley. It isn't cheap. We had to fly out there, it costs $2k for a table, etc. For us, its good to get out to SF every so often to visit with friends, investors, partners, etc anyway. Early on, not that many folks came by our booth (we were in the 500 startups alley, not the main one, so we were a bit away from the crowd).
Ultimately though, for us the exposure was worth it. We had several good meetings and customers came out of it - often it was often from folks we met at an afterparty who stopped by our table the next day. We also did a few guerilla things that helped us gain even more exposure: http://feefighters.com/blog/3-ways-feefighters-disrupted-tcd... Who else can say that top VC's tweeted about them from the bathroom? We then followed up with some of the VC's who said they love our scrappiness and have had several email conversations (we aren't actively raising money, but never hurts to meet w/ VC's).
There are ways you can maximize your opportunities and I think far too few people did those things. Generally though, if you can afford it, I think it is worth going even in the alley - but you have to make the most of your opportunities... We saw folks sitting behind their table, and people who just weren't very friendly/outgoing. That doesn't work at conferences. Send your most extroverted people out there. You need to be able to talk and relate to people instantly.