It’s 4:30 a.m. Pacific time, and I’m sitting in the airport at Sea-Tac, waiting to board my plane back home after attending SMX Advanced ’08. Like last year, it was a great conference, with advanced topics and all the heavy hitters in search present. And like last year, it went way too fast – I feel like I needed another day to absorb all the great information and talk to all the great people that were there.
All that said, I’ll share what I felt were the best things about the conference, and what can be improved upon for next year.
The best:
* The last session of the last day, Amazing New PPC Tactics, was by far the best session I attended. David Szetela’s presentation on improving results in the content network was full of useful, actionable tips on setting up content network campaigns that perform.
* The networking, again, was one of the best parts of the show. It’s a relatively small conference, and because it’s geared to advanced SEMs, opportunities abound to chat with the movers and shakers in the industry. I got to share thoughts and ideas with Matt Van Wagner, Mona Elesseily, David Szetela, Marty Weintraub, and many more; and I had the distinct pleasure of having dinner with Carrie Hill, Lauren Cobb, and Cathy Tomten; and hanging out with Colleen Wright at the PPC Pro People meet-and-greet. It was great to reunite with those I’ve met before, and even better to meet some new friends and colleagues.
* The food. Again, SMX delivered the goods with incredible food and snacks. As I sit here in the airport where none of the food stands are open yet, I’m longing for the great breakfast I enjoyed the past 2 days!
Things to improve:
* Now that I’m working for an agency dealing with small to medium size businesses, I found that a lot of the sessions and ideas shared were geared toward large, enterprise-level organizations with unlimited financial and human resources. There were a lot of really in-depth, granular ideas presented, yet I found myself thinking “that’s nice, but we don’t have a single client that would be willing to pay for that, nor do we have the people to implement all those things.” I’d like to hear more ideas that don’t require fancy software packages and a team of programmers and analysts to implement and act upon.
* There seemed to be more sales pitches and less sharing of how-to at this conference than in the past. The session on “Closing the Loop” was almost entirely a pitch for SalesForce, which I’m sure is a great CRM product – but none of our clients have this, so how do I implement these tactics? And how do I find the time to dig into that level of detail?
* And one housekeeping item: Provide a coat check! This is Seattle – it’s cold and rainy, and since the show hotel was a couple blocks from the conference center, people brought coats and umbrellas – which they were forced to lug around all day long. And because a laptop was a must, since that’s how questions were submitted this year, folks had that to lug around as well. It left me with no free hands to shake or grab handouts, business cards, or the few swag items from the exhibit hall.
As you can see, it’s a pretty short list of things to improve. All in all, it was a top-notch conference – I’m already looking forward to next year!
*Author’s note: This post was written on Thursday, June 5, 2008.
SMX Advanced was great! I just got back from SES San Jose and it was also a great show, but the food is by far much better at SMX Advanced…! Wish you could have been there hope to see you at upcoming events!
Colleen Wright
Hey Colleen! Glad to hear that SES was good. I too wish I could have been there!