BlogWorld & New Media Expo Early Bird Closing

It’s that time again. BlogWorld & New Media Expo early registration rates are about to cut out on July 1st.

BlogWorld & New Media Expo, held in Las Vegas, has been a highlight of each of the past two years for me. It is such a great gathering of people who are actively involved, or otherwise interested in learning about, blogging, podcasting and video blogging. There is an amazing lineup of speakers and topics and a wonderfully diverse group of people attending – by no means just a gathering of geeks (not that there’s anything wrong with that).

BlogWorld & New Media Expo 2008

BlogWorld & New Media Expo 2008

The organizers boast, justifiably, that BlogWorld & New Media Expo is “the only industry-wide trade show for the blogging and new media world”.

This year promises to be bigger and better than ever, now that BlogWorld Expo and a former, partly parallel event, New Media Expo, have merged into one event. Dates of the Expo and main conference are October 16-17, with with an exclusive Social Media Summit as an all-day event on the previous day, October 15. The Expo and all the conference sessions are held in the Las Vegas Convention Center.

Although my focus in the past couple of years has been on the conference sessions – especially last year when I was helping with the management of the conference sessions as well as presenting – the Expo part of the event is significant in its own right. Frankly, when I first heard about the idea of a blogging and new media expo I wondered what would be on display: my wondering stopped the first time I visited the Expo.

The event website lists some of what you will find in the Expo:

…publishing platforms, design companies, web/blog/podcast hosting companies, aggregators, add-on services, plug-ins, widgets, computer hardware & software, wireless services, podcasting products, wireless & high speed ISPs, VOIP companies, on-line advertising networks, news readers, RSS/syndication services, search engines, consulting companies, affiliate program partners, new media products and services…

In fact, there is so much to see in the Expo and there are so many interesting people to speak to at the various stands, that it can be a challenge fitting all that in and participating fully in the conference program. A nice challenge to have.

And then there is the networking, around the Expo area, in the coffee lounge, between conference sessions and at any of the plethora of parties and other social events over the few days. Sleep is optional.

Disclosure: As well as being a huge fan of the event, I’m an affiliate of BlogWorld & New Media Expo, so if you click through from here there is a potential benefit for me. If that’s a problem, just use the basic web address – http://www.blogworldexpo.com . Either way, do check it out and if you do attend, please make sure to track me down and say hi!

There are excellent discounts on tickets right now but they close in a few days time, on July 1st. Click on the banner below for more information.

Join the top bloggers and new media experts in the world at BlogWorld Expo 2009

Picture BlogWorld & New Media Expo by adrants, via Flickr, Creative Commons

BlogWorld and New Media Expo in Full Swing

BlogWorld and New Media Expo 2008 is in full swing, at the Las Vegas Convention Center. This is the second year in a row for this event and the vibe is excellent.The participation numbers are excellent too – from memory there were about 1,200 speakers last year and I believe there were about 100 speakers/panelists. I was told last night at the main event party that this year there are over 2,200 participants and some 200 or more speakers/presenters.

I participated yesterday on a panel with the topic How to Plan, Build and Promote a Business Blog for Small Business, moderated by Rich Brooks, President of flyte New Media. The other panelists were Denise Wakeman of the Blog Squad and John T. Unger, artist, blogger and expert on the Typepad blogging platform.

The session was very lively, great fun to be part of and – judging by the feedback I’ve had – informative and helpful.

In what I thought was a daring move, our moderator set up a stream on Twitter to capture questions and comments live from the floor: the twitstream was projected live onto a large screen.  I had wondered, frankly, whether all of that would be a distraction, but it seemed to work very well.


Organizing My Road Warrior Blogging Toolkit

I used to say to people that if they could write an email they could blog. Which is true as far as it goes.

It is also true that once you start getting serious about blogging you start to think about incorporating still and moving images and audio. There are a lot of resources online, but if we want to have our own original material, we need some tools of the trade. Especially if we want to get into live blogging.

Des Walsh's blogging travel kit

I had a stab at some live blogging from BlogWorld & New Media Expo last year in Las Vegas. I was really not prepared: about the best I achieved was some tweeting during a couple of the keynotes.

As I get my road warrior tools together for this year’s BlogWorld Expo I feel much better prepared.

Probably the centerpiece of my new traveling blogger kit is my Asus eee pc notebook, which I’ll be taking this time instead of the perfectly good but chiropractor-friendly Asus A6000 Entertainment Notebook I lugged around the Las Vegas Convention Center last year.

I’m also looking forward to being able to use the smaller notebook on the plane, even when the person in front of me decides to push their seat back into the recline mode. In economy, it’s impossible to use the larger notebook in those circumstances.

I have to say the keyboard on the eee is not big enough for me to type quickly and accurately, so although not in the picture above but hopefully in the mailbox on Monday is a foldable keyboard bought on eBay a few days ago for the princely sum of $6.99 (the postage cost more).

We have arranged to collect a Flip camcorder delivered via Amazon, for when we get to Vegas. That should make it a snap to do some instant interviews with fellow delegates and upload them more easily than with my excellent but comparatively cumbersome and firewire-requiring Samsung: although I am taking the bigger camcorder too, together with a neat, very lightweight tripod I picked up recently for a very reasonable $40.

I suspect that what I film with the larger camera will be for editing when I get home, as I won’t have access to the editing software I have here while I’m on the road. I’m hoping to be able to use Seesmic to record some comments directly to the notebook. There are some challenges there, which I’ll cover in another post.

I’m also taking my lightweight Samsung L100 for still shots (it actually takes video too, but I use it basically as a still camera .

Then there is my new Plantronics foldable headset, as recommended last year at BlogWorld by the legendary podcaster Leo Laporte. I have to admit it is a whole lot better device than the $9 one from KMart that I’d been using!

Not forgetting an adaptor plug or two. Had a terrible time in the US several years ago – could not find an adaptor to enable me to use my Australian power cord, even in New York!

I know my travel kit is not the advanced equipment some of my colleagues use, but for a word-focused person like me it’s a veritable hi-tech assembly!

And yes, there is the usual panoply of re-chargers, spare batteries, firewire, power cords, cartridges…

Also some analog kit

In the picture above I’ve included deliberately my Moleskine notebook. There are some things I keep up with better that way than digitally.

The hi-lighter is because I’m re-discovering its value when reading through a lot of printed material.

Online services

A valuable resource for live blogging is the online CoverItLive service, for which I signed up ages ago but have not so far used under fire.

CoverItLive

I’m reading only good things about CoverItLive, for example in several comments on a post the other day by Darren Rowse, a.k.a. Problogger, with tips about live blogging.

A great resource for me in terms of podcasting and anything requiring upload/download facility for audio or video is BYOAudio, which costs me $19.95 a month – which I consider money very well spent.

For still image editing on the computer I need a Linux product and right now I don’t want to even think about trying to download and learn GIMP for the eee, so I was relieved when someone recommended the Picnik online service. I’ve tested it and it looks like it can do what I need, basically re-sizing and saving images as jpegs or gifs.

A couple more posts about live blogging that I’ve found helpful are:

Aliza Sherman on Preparing to Live Blog an Event

Josh Hallett in early 2007 – this is a post which is especially helpful on how to approach a paid gig as a conference blogger, including a recommendation to be transparent if you are blogging for a client’s dollar.

We’re arriving in Vegas a couple of days before the conference begins, so we can do a bit of sightseeing in the surrounding areas. Hopefully that will generate a few pictures I can upload.

I’m sure there are some things I’ve forgotten for my road warrior blogging toolkit. And I hope if you notice any glaring omissions you will be kind enough to tell me.

BlogWorld Early Bird Registration Ending Soon

BlogWorld Expo 2008

I’m pretty sure the joke’s been used before, but what’s blogged in Vegas definitely doesn’t stay in Vegas. And with 1,600 bloggers in Las Vegas last November for BlogWorld and New Media Expo there was a whole lotta blogging goin’ on.

I met face to face for the first time lots of friends from the blogosphere. I made new friends. And I got new information, new insights. I sat in on outstanding keynotes and expert sessions and had the pleasure of presenting a session myself, with my friend and colleague Rich Brooks.

And there were parties. Excellent parties!

I wrote about my Blogworld Expo experience in a bit more detail back in March, with pics including one of me with Mark Cuban.

BlogWorld Expo is on earlier this year, in September, and in Las Vegas again.

Key points from the website:

The 2008 BlogWorld & New Media Expo will take place September 20-21 at the Las Vegas Convention Center, with the exclusive “Executive & Entrepreneur” conference beginning September 19th.

BlogWorld is the first and only industry-wide tradeshow, conference, and media event dedicated to promoting the dynamic industry of blogging and new media.

In addition to being the only industry-wide exhibition, BlogWorld features the largest blogging conference in the world including more than 50 seminars, panel discussions and keynotes from leaders in online technology and internet-savvy business.

On the basis of the inaugural event last year, I can say confidently that anyone who wants to know where blogging, podcasting, video blogging, social media generally are heading and how they can ride the wave will find BlogWorld the place to be in September.

Right now, there are just two days to go to catch the early bird rate – i.e. it closes June 20 (US time). Not just a modest discount, but up to 50% of the full cost.

Did I mention the parties?

Hope to see you there.

(Update: about hotel reservations through the BlogWorld Expo people, I’ve just been told by someone who has done some comparisons that the deals being offered are excellent.)

Why lijit Loves Bloggers

About six months ago I installed on my Thinking Home Business and then on this blog the lijit search and statistics tool.

I acknowledge I’m a fan of lijit and have been from the outset. The fandom is due in no small measure to the attention the people at lijit obviously pay to those who use their product. For example, within – as I recall – about 24 hours of installing lijit, I noticed on my MyBlogLog widget some new visitors, who turned out to be lijit executives. Impressive!

Then I found the lijit people amazingly responsive to questions and feedback. I suppose I’m so used to those pro-forma emails you get from companies who have asked for feedback (don’t they all?) saying someone will be in touch soon and then you never hear, or you get a waffly, weasel-word copout response, at best.

Not so lijit. They address what you say or ask and respond as human beings, telling you what they are able to do and what might have to go on a wishlist.

Meeting the lijit people at BlogWorld Expo confirmed the impression of a company actually wanting to engage with bloggers and have real conversations.

And yes, I do have a very cool lijit t-shirt from BlogWorld Expo, but I would be a fan anyway.

But it’s probably fair to say that, before I installed lijit, I hadn’t really thought a lot about the value or otherwise of installing a search tool, either in addition to or instead of the default search tool that seems to come with all or most blogging platforms.

I knew I could, for example, install a Google search engine on a blog, with the options of searching either the site or the Web generally. I resisted that, I suppose because I thought it was just a free kick for Google and anyway there was already a search tool installed.

I realise now that that thinking was rather narrow. Lorelle Van Fossen has a neat post on why and how, on a WordPress site, you would think about replacing the default tool with a third party search tool (such as, but not necessarily, Google) and how you would do that.

And John Jantsch wrote the other day about why bloggers should think about installing a search engine and specifically about installing the new Google Custom Search on his blog. He is obviously pleased with what it does and also with the fact that it provides statistics of what people are looking for on your site.

That sounded good. But I knew that lijit also provides a quality search functionality (I have tested it) and provides extensive, detailed statistics. And, like the non-professional version of Google Custom Search, lijit is free.

So I thought it was time to have a good look at what lijit was actually providing and see if I could perhaps make even better use of it than I’ve done so far and then to blog about it.

First I emailed lijit and asked for a comment on Google Custom Search as praised in John Jantsch’s post. I was told that lijit’s CEO Todd Vernon had left a comment on that post (I’ve been checking since and haven’t seen it but it was pointed out to me that comments on that blog are moderated). I’ll be interested to read those comments in due course, assuming they appear, but in the meantime I have had a good email conversation with lijit and have also listened – twice – to a very interesting session on BlogTalk Radio Mediasphere, where my good friends and colleagues Jim Turner and Tris Hussey had a very lively interview/discussion the other day with Todd Vernon himself.

So I feel I’ve now got a reasonable grasp of what lijit offers and why – as the title of this post says – lijit loves bloggers.

The short explanation of what lijit does, from the company website, is:

Lijit allows you to easily create your own search engine. One that searches your blog, bookmarks, photos, blogroll, and more. By offering the Lijit Search Wijit on your blog, readers can search all of YOU. In turn, Lijit gives you detailed statistics about those searches, so you can better understand and serve your reader community.

From my notes of the BlogTalk Radio interview with Todd Vernon (TV), here is my summary of what makes lijit special in terms of being a blog search and statistics tool.

lijit differs from other players in the search space, such as Technorati, in that lijit is not a “destination website”.

From the beginning, lijit’s goal was to leverage trust online, drawing on how we handle relationships offline.

What people do in real life is totally different from what they do online – in the real world “you tend to go ask people you know”: you use your relationships with people as metadata.

There is really no equivalent to that in the online space. You reach for Google and then you start sifting through mountains of data.

But in the online world there is a “sort of a parallel” to the real world approach, and that is essentially the blogosphere.

“The reason you read blogs is you identify with the position. You may not agree with the position, but as you read them you understand that metadata the same way you understand people when you talk to them in real life.” (TV)

The service is based simply on a widget you plug into your website. lijit uses the term “publishers”, which includes bloggers but extends beyond them.

Subscribers/readers find out not only what the publisher has written, but also what the publisher might have found on del.icio.us, photos the publisher has posted on flickr, and then the other influencers in the publisher’s life, for example via a blogger’s blogroll and MyBlogLog information.

Subscribers can mine data through you and through your network, using the metadata they’ve learned about you.

This helps the subscriber. It is also helpful for the publisher, because lijit provides the publisher with statistics on all this activity.

So what’s the big difference from competitors?

Todd Vernon says it’s that lijit wants to provide “really cool stuff for publishers”. He sees this as a major diffentiator.

They are trying to find people with interesting content who don’t necessarily hit the radar screen on other services.

Their focus is not on page rank – “we’re essentially like ‘people rank’” – tracking a page rank type behavior in the linking but “more of a respect metric”, “an information metric”.

Looking at “the entire social structure” of the participating publishers.

And what lijit found interesting about publishers, especially in the blogging space, is that a blog tends to be a “Rosetta stone” of the things the publisher is involved in. “It shows their tweets, it shows their connections to the blog world, to other people. It shows where their photos are.”

What lijit has developed is how to rapidly consume that information, almost instantaneously, and build the social network of its publishers.

The signup is easy and rapid. And how is this for a claim, for any business? “We have zero churn” (TV).

There are a few areas where I would like to see changes. Especially the fact that the system does not seem to have been structured so far to accommodate easily those of us (and we are many) who have more than one blog. At present, to get lijit working adequately on separate blogs I’ve had to create separate lijit accounts/identities. That to me looks like a glitch that needs to be overcome. I’ve raised it with them. They have taken notice. To me that’s a good sign.

But crucially for bloggers, as Todd Vernon has said, the business is targeted at bloggers and other publishers. “The primary customers are publishers” (TV).

Which is why lijit loves bloggers.

And why it is my expectation that more bloggers will come to love lijit.