Entconnect 2008 Recap

Share

EntConnect 2008 is over and it was another great conference. We had a number of new people there this year, thanks to the efforts of our regular attendees in recruiting like-minded individuals. Historically, our attendees were primarily made up of those who were Midnight Engineering Magazine readers or who had attended previous conferences. With the magazine out of print, we recognized EntConnect was taking on the feel of a reunion which is not a sustainable way to run an annual conference. People often acquire other responsibilities so eventually, without new recruits, a conference that depends only on previous attendees will shrink down to the point where it makes no sense to continue holding it. We all enjoy the conference too much to let that happen.

At the end of each conference in the past, we had brainstormed on ways to make it better, but in the time that elapses between the conference, everyone gets busy and no one has the time to do the promotion. EntConnect is a small conference and it’s not a money-making venture, just a labor of love that barely covers its expenses, so we don’t have a big budget for promoting it. This year a small group of volunteers started having regular conference calls about 8 weeks before the event. We offered a substantial discount for early bird pricing (which is now in effect for the 2009 conference), and we also enabled the ability to register and take credit cards on-line via a service called RegOnline. In addition, more of us have the administration privileges to modify the website, which reduces the workload for John Gaudio, the conference organizer.

After the early bird pricing expired, we offered discount codes of up to 1/3 off the cost of the conference and promoted it to local groups and individuals who would be a good fit for EntConnect. That effort didn’t really produce the results we had hoped for. I’d estimate that more than 1000 people became aware of the conference through various email and on-line promotions, but only one person signed up with a discount code. Most thought that the reason for the low response rate was that it was done within 4 weeks of the conference and people have their plans already solidified by that time. So it may have been too late for this kind of last minute conference promoting. It seems that word-of-mouth has remained our most effective form of recruiting.

As much as I enjoy seeing the regular attendees, the highlight of the show this year was meeting the new attendees who are engaged in startups and other entrepreneurial activities. Several of the new attendees also gave presentations. Nathan Seidle of Spark Fun Electronics gave a great presentation on how he started his company while a junior in college and has experienced 100% year-on-year growth in his business for the past 4 years. Rob McNealy of Startup Story Radio talked about his startup experiences and gave a great storyboard presentation about his thoughts on entrepreneurship. Howard Keating of ZANA Network talked about his company’s mission and on the topic of intellectual property as it applies to the small business owner. Steve Schmutzer of Firefly Medical gave an engaging presentation entitled ‘Ten Lessons I Learned as an Entrepreneur’ as well as bringing along a prototype of his company’s revolutionary Infusion Management System.

We had 35 people sign up for the conference and with 5 cancellations, we ended up with 30 attendees. Of the 30 attendees, we had 11 first-timers, which is probably a new record. In addition to those I mentioned previously, we had Mike O’Neil of Integrated Alliances who gave a presentation on using LinkedIn, Gary Lundquist who talked about his latest venture, InnoSearch Colorado, and Andrea Shaver, the 13-year-old daughter of Dave Shaver, who gave an outstanding presentation on leadership and how she helped raise money for a specially-designed wheelchair for a disabled girl.

It was also great to meet other first-time attendees, including Kristie Colby of Colby Creating Consulting, Isaac Davenport of Syncroness Product Development, and Susan and Christopher Smith.

This was the first year I had time to participate in the pre-conference activities. We had intended to go skiing, but after having a delayed start on Thursday morning, my friend Court and I decided to just do some sight-seeing in Denver instead. First we stopped at the REI Denver flagship store and Court demonstrated his rock climbing prowess, quickly ascending a 5.10 level difficulty climb on one of the the tallest indoor freestanding climbing walls in the world. Next we went to Casa Bonita for lunch. I had never been there before, but had heard so much about it. It’s a combination of carnival, theater, indoor theme park, arcade, and yes, you can eat there too. We explored many of the restaurant’s 52,000 sq. ft. which seats approximately 1100 people in a number of areas with different themes. After that, it was off to do some Indoor Skydiving where I got to experience a whole new sensation of flying on a column of air. Later that evening we met at the hotel lounge for some dinner and conversation with several other conference attendees.

On Friday, we had a very late breakfast, which actually became our lunch, and about a dozen of us went out for some high performance go cart racing. The carts will go over 50 mph, so it was quite a thrill the drive them around a track which bore more than a passing resemblance to a scaled down Formula One track, complete with tight hairpin turns and super fast straight-aways that really required one’s full concentration to stay in control. After that, we went to the Cherry Creek Family Shooting Center to do some trap shooting. It had been about 20 years since I had last gone trap shooting, so I struggled to break just over half the clay targets, but it was still a lot of fun. In the evening, we headed across the street from the hotel along with about two dozen other conference attendees to the Black Angus Steak House for dinner. There we met Nathan Seidle, who entertained us with his Port-o-Rotary phone. Later, we assembled in the hotel bar until they told us they were ready to close.

On Saturday I went down to the conference room about 8:00 to see if they needed any help setting up. I won’t go into the details of the speakers, but you can get an idea of the speakers/topics from the 2008 schedule. We broke for dinner and got back a little late, around 7:30 p.m., and launched into the evening presentations. After the last presentation was over at 11:00 p.m. I got to play some poker, a game of Texas Hold ’em, which I had never played before but the rest of the players were familiar enough to talk me through the number of chips I needed to put in to keep up with the others. It wasn’t like any other poker game I’ve ever played, but I ended up coming in second. Surprisingly, the winner, Rob Packard, passed on the Garmin C340 GPS and so I walked away with the grand prize. My wife is thrilled with it ;-). I didn’t get back to my hotel room until near
ly 2:00 a.m.

Sunday morning I was able to wake up at 7:00 a.m. without too much trouble and met some of the others in the restaurant where we had breakfast. The presentations started at 9:00 a.m. and continued until about 2:00 p.m.. We then packed up the conference room and about 16 of us headed out for a late lunch at a nearby Mexican restaurant. After that, I drove Court to the airport for his flight back to California and then headed home myself. I was tired but content that the conference had gone very well and that we’ll have a number of new recruiters to help expand next year’s conference.

If you’re reading this and are interested in running your own small business or startup, you should consider coming to the 2009 EntConnect conference. It’s 50% off if you sign up now, and you can keep you calendar clear so you know that you’ll make it. There’s no better way to learn than to get advice from those who have gone before you and you’ll certainly meet many of them at EntConnect which will be held in Lakewood, CO March 26-29, 2009.

3 thoughts on “Entconnect 2008 Recap

  1. Sounds like a lot of fun, someday if I can get my LSA I may try to fly over…

    What was the indoor “skydiving” like? I have always wanted to do that, but I have no idea how I would go about doing that.

    Are those the kind of things that may go on during Oshkosh?

  2. Hi Chris,

    I’ve had many dreams of flying which is a sensation of ‘body surfing’ through the air. They are my favorite dreams. But they do not involve rushing wind or noise. So this experience was a little like the dreams combined with a significant amount of noise and wind.

    It made me think a bit about learning to ride a bicycle. Before you learn to ride a bicycle, you assume that it may be impossible, but after you’ve learned, it seems so easy that you can’t remember what was difficult about it.

    The instructors were absolutely amazing, but for us first-timers, it was a little confusing because you can’t really tell which movement you need to make to create the desired effect.

    I’d do it again though, and hopefully be a little better at it the next time around.

    I don’t think wind tunnels can be moved around manually like carny rides. They are a franchise operation and the equipment costs somewhere around $4M and the power to run the fans on the larger models approaches 1MW (i.e., enough to power 1000 homes).

    If you follow the link on the posting to indoorskydiving.org, you can find tthe franchisor (Skyventure.com) and they have links to all the other locations.

  3. Yeah, if they were a carny ride, there would also be the issue of electricity. I don’t think that carnies have that high amp/voltage lines 😉

Leave a Reply to Chris S. Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

CommentLuv badge