Oct 242011
 

Besides stalking fire trucks for three days, the BlogHer Writers ’11 conference was an absolutely amazing experience. I tweeted at the end of the conference day, “I don’t know. I’ll have to marinate on this… but I think #blogherwriters has been my fav blogging conference. Ever.”

I marinated on it. And I stand by that tweet.

Opening session at #blogherwriters

Here’s why:

1) The programming was amazing. The BlogHer Events staff and Penguin did a phenomenal job at picking relevant, inspiring, insightful, funny, real people to speak on the panels. I learned so much — and not just the “fluffy bunnies” stuff of how great it is when you’re a published author. Some of it was big and scary and kind of “uh, is this really what I want to be doing?” But it was necessary information to share for those in attendance to have a full picture of publishing in today’s market. The not-so-scary stuff was just fantastic. I could go on and on and on. Suffice it to say, I finally feel encouraged enough to move forward. (Note: Check the LiveBlogs for what was said.)

2) The people were amazing. Dresden hit on it already, but the truth is that everyone was willing to talk about their book, the story that they have to tell. The conversations I had were real. The question of the opening reception became, “So, what’s your book?” And people answered the question. I saw women owning their ideas, their brilliance, their stories. No one was looking away for a bigger blogger to talk to. No one shrugged anyone off. It was real and fantastic. And it was freaking awesome.

3) No brands. Okay, Penguin was in attendance obviously, and some other great brand-sponsors were mentioned here and there, but otherwise, there was a total lack of brand presence — and it was intensely refreshing. Now, I love me some swag. I respect and appreciate that brands help pay for the stuff (venue, price, swag, etc) of other conferences. However, I’ve also been insulted by brand interaction before: the “you’re not big enough to talk to” attitude or the “I’m only here because my boss is paying me” attitude of total disinterest. There was none of that. Plus, no one had to rush off to interact with brands. With no expo hall, we interacted with each other and were all blessed by it.

4) The Mentor Brainstorming session was such a good idea that I’m sure someone, somewhere needs a promotion. I don’t know who came up with it, but it was a fantastic idea. Not only were we privy to a publishing professional, but our groups lead us through discussions on many topics relating to our chosen session. I feel like I left my session with a brain full of new information.

My Nametag

Enough gushing. Well, mostly.

The truth is that I’ve been to small conferences and big conferences alike, for everything from blogging to adoption to technology to faith and all the stuff in between. BlogHer Writers ’11 blew them all out of the water. Maybe it’s like someone else tweeted — I was among my people. Maybe the hard work of BlogHer and Penguin alike paid off in spades. Maybe I was finally ready to be in a certain place at a certain time talking about a certain subject. I don’t know why and what all came together to create the Perfect Storm of a conference, one that washed me up on the shores of an attainable dream island and said, “Conquer.” But I am glad that it happened.

I left New York feeling inspired and encouraged and ready to take the next steps. And that is what a conference should do for an attendee, no matter the topic.

  4 Responses to “After BlogHer Writers ’11: Inspired and Ready to Go”

  1. Oh, thank you for this post, Jenna! I so wanted to go to this, but it didn’t work out this year (finances, new job for me as of last month). I’m hoping that BlogHer will bring this back again. Was there a mention of next year, perhaps?

    Off to check the LiveBlogs! Thanks again … and all best in your writing. (Are you doing NaNoWriMo?)
    Melissa´s last [type] ..The Sunday Salon: Another Read-a-Thon For the Books

  2. Jenna,

    I left feeling the same way you did — I need to percolate on this for a while. I had such a great experience but felt like I learned and my mindset changed so much that I needed to catch up with it. Your post so phenomenally helped me put it all together.

    I also loved your comparisons to other conferences, because I’ve never been to any other conferences and in part for fears of the exact things you mentioned weren’t a part of Writers 2011. Thanks for pointing all that out to me. I didn’t feel that sense of competitiveness there, I loved that everyone treated everyone else with so much respect and welcome, whatever size of fish they were or pond they lived in. That really was incredible and generous of everyone.

    I too was surprised that people so freely shared their book & ideas, no scarcity mentality about sharing what they were doing, what they had learned or what they wanted. It really pointed out that there is space for everyone and everyone has their own niche and room to grow. That is pretty amazing!

    Thanks for this great post. I am going to read it again to help me think about what else I have learned and how I have changed from my experience this past week. Thanks!
    kalanicut´s last [type] ..Blue Skies Shining

  3. Oh, please tell me BlogHer will do this again next year! I wanted so badly to go, but it wasn’t in the cards this year. Between you and Dresden I am, for the first time, feeling true conference-envy!
    Margaret´s last [type] ..Clarification on Lunch Wars

  4. I had a feeling BlogHer Writers would be a good one. I couldn’t go for a myriad of family and work reasons. I’m devouring everything I can from the posts and tweets. Maybe I’ll get there next year?!
    MusingsfromMe/Jill´s last [type] ..What I Should Be Doing…

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