Recent Posts

Archives

Topics


Main | Content Keeps Meetings Afloat »

When Blogs Have No Purpose?

By Mitchell Beer | August 1, 2008

The client is always right.

So when a meeting organizer told me firmly that she saw no purpose in a post-conference blog, I stopped to listen.

Our team has spent a good part of the past year showing how social media can extend the life and breadth of a conference, while the cornerstone content of a conference adds new life and meaning to blogs, wikis, and online discussion boards.

The client declared that no one has time for that: once people get home from a conference, they file it away and move on.

Too often, that’s true. But I still think we can get more from conference blogs by following some simple steps.

  1. Make the conference program itself compelling and worthwhile.
  2. Put key content online—real session reports, not just bloggers’ opinion pieces—while the conference is under way
  3. Line up three or a half-dozen leaders in your community to blog on the cornerstone content you’ve posted.
  4. Send e-blasts to announce new additions to your conference content website.
  5. Use permission email to make sure you send readers the news they need on the topics they’ve chosen. Make every e-blast a wanted e-blast.

There’s a certain magic onsite when participants’ shared interest and enthusiasm hits critical mass. Blogs can be a great tool for carrying on that momentum for weeks or months after the live event.

Topics: Conference Blogs, Conference Content, Email Marketing, Social Media |

Comments