Boarding Party

Hubspot and the Lab Rats

Announcements Rock

You know what’s awesome? The opportunity to work with great people. I love that I spend my days with guys like Justin Levy and Colin Browning figuring out how to educate and equip business communicators with the latest and best stuff we’re learning. Further more, I’m so thrilled that I get to work with the pirates on events, as well as with David Meerman Scott and Paul Gillin. So what’s more awesome than that?

Taking on More

We’re thrilled to report that New Marketing Labs has acquired the Inbound Marketing Summit event from our friends at Hubspot. Going forward, we will rename our events to be the Inbound Marketing Summit. The name New Marketing Summit will be sunk, and a burial at sea will be had. (Apologies to those who commissioned tattoos after last year’s event, because you felt it was so awesome. I have a carnation design that hides it well!)

What’s In It for You?

So, who goes to these types of events, anyway? Marketing and PR and advertising types are the typical attendee, though we seem to get more and more C-level and president types, too. People come to learn how to get more business using the online tools like social media, email marketing, video, social networks, and things like that. We get both agency types as well as people from companies like Kodak, Dow Jones, Wiley Publishers, and all kinds of companies you know, who also need to know about the tools and strategies, just like you.

If you’re going to come, it’s a pretty damned good show. Ask someone like Richard Reeve or Susan Kang Nam or I’m not sure… some more folks, if you want to ask around.

Our mission, should you want to know it, in 2009 is: strategy into action. That means we’re going to bring you into the event with your questions, your marketing challenges, your interests, and give you the entire spectrum of information. Instead of just talking about how cool blogs and things are, we’ll go right deep to the “actionable steps” level. We’ve got great speakers, great authors, great practitioners, and we want to share everything they know with you.

Hold off on registering for a few days. I’ve got a special announcement there, too. Seriously. Don’t do it for like… another day or two.

Speakers for the April 27th-29th Inbound Marketing Summit (so far)

The first Inbound Marketing Summit event last year in Boston featured speakers like David Meerman Scott, me, my PodCamp co-founder, Christopher S. Penn, and mister Seth Godin, to name just a few. It was a kickass event. (That’s a technical term). Want to see who’s confirmed so far for San Francisco in April?

Here’s who’s up (so far) in April 2009:

And that’s just so far…

I’ve begged some other great people to come and speak as well. We’re closing in on that soon-ish.

Cool Sponsors

There’s no party without the sponsors, so I’m always excited that we get to work with friends who also happen to run businesses we care about and support. You should know something about this: I am very picky about who collaborates with us on the event. All of these sponsors offer some product or service that I personally feel is useful to this space. They’ll be coming to our events and you can ask them every hard question you want. Kick the tires. Bug them. Challenge them to serve your needs. That’s why they head out to the events.

Sponsors for our San Francisco event in April (so far) are:

(If I missed you, please just tell me, and I’ll fix it.)

Just One More Thing

In case that’s not enough of an event for you (because hey, we’ve merged two together), let’s add this bit of news: Jen McClure from The Society for New Communications Research (SNCR) is hosting her 5th Annual New Comm Forum as part of a larger offering with us. I went to this show last year up in the Sonoma Valley, and it was a blast! Jen’s audience really matches with what we’re doing, and so we think we’ve got a nice mix with bringing everyone together in the same place.

Speakers at Jen’s event so far include Shashi Bellamkonda, me, Adrian Chan, Vanessa DiMauro, Laura Fitton, Susan Getgood, Paul Gillin, Shel Holtz, Shel Israel, Alan Kelly, JD Lasica, Geoff Livingston, Jen McClure, Gaurav Mishra, Katie Paine, Brian Solis, Todd Van Hoosear, Dr. Mihaela Vorvoreanu, and many others.

Okay, Another One More Thing

Do you think that open source software relates to this space? I do. How can companies innovate fast enough to be competitive? Where will tomorrow’s great services come from?

Bill Washburn has an extensive experience with open source software, and with the OPenID Foundation. We’re pleased to present a new event, OpenBox, that will take place on Tuesday the 28th of April at the same venue, alongside our other events. I’ll talk about that more later, but I wanted to give you the heads up that we’ve got something for your CEOs and CTOs to do while the CMOs hang out with us at the Inbound Marketing Summit.

So there.

We’re growing. We acquired the Inbound Marketing Summit because we want to get all you bright people in the same room at the same time. We are likely going to find other events that match our interests and build relationships with them, as well. We’ll have another announcement about that exact thing coming up very shortly.

Any questions? Thoughts? Am I going to see you in San Francisco, or will you be coming to Dallas or Boston, or our soon-to-be-named next event?

Photo credit, Hubspot

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  • http://www.danomi.com Young Che

    Definitely see you guys when you come down South. Dallas it is.

  • http://www.danomi.com Young Che

    Definitely see you guys when you come down South. Dallas it is.

  • http://ginakay.wordpress.com Gina Kay Landis

    Stellar peeps to work with, to be sure, and innovation helps with event changes as well as technology – and you certainly hit that moving target often!

    Would love to be at Dallas, Boston, California events, but am here in Midwest. Chicago would be North Coast, yes? =)

  • http://ginakay.wordpress.com Gina Kay Landis

    Stellar peeps to work with, to be sure, and innovation helps with event changes as well as technology – and you certainly hit that moving target often!

    Would love to be at Dallas, Boston, California events, but am here in Midwest. Chicago would be North Coast, yes? =)

  • http://www.velvetchainsaw.com Dave Lutz

    Chris, congratulations on your acquisition and best of luck on all of your conferences in 2009! I work exclusively in the meeting and convention space and early indications are that 2009 is not going to be a great year for that industry. Between the government sending a message that meetings are wasteful spending and corporate America squeezing travel and marketing budgets, we all need to do a better job of communicating the value of face2face gatherings.

    From your post, it sounds like you are offering a unique educational and networking opportunity. Additionally, the sponsors/vendors get to meet prospects that will certainly go through their pipeline faster than distance selling. Like many successful conferences, your event will deliver a tremendous amount of value.

    Meetings and conventions are responsible for over 15% of the North America travel and hospitality industry spend (one of the largest industries in our country). There are hundred’s of thousands of jobs being cut in hotels, restaurants and other related services. If you are a supporter of meetings and conventions and the value that they bring to business, please sign the petition at http://www.keepamericameeting.org Also, keep going to conferences and shows…grow your professional network, get smarter, research new products and grow your business. I certainly will!

  • http://www.velvetchainsaw.com Dave Lutz

    Chris, congratulations on your acquisition and best of luck on all of your conferences in 2009! I work exclusively in the meeting and convention space and early indications are that 2009 is not going to be a great year for that industry. Between the government sending a message that meetings are wasteful spending and corporate America squeezing travel and marketing budgets, we all need to do a better job of communicating the value of face2face gatherings.

    From your post, it sounds like you are offering a unique educational and networking opportunity. Additionally, the sponsors/vendors get to meet prospects that will certainly go through their pipeline faster than distance selling. Like many successful conferences, your event will deliver a tremendous amount of value.

    Meetings and conventions are responsible for over 15% of the North America travel and hospitality industry spend (one of the largest industries in our country). There are hundred’s of thousands of jobs being cut in hotels, restaurants and other related services. If you are a supporter of meetings and conventions and the value that they bring to business, please sign the petition at http://www.keepamericameeting.org Also, keep going to conferences and shows…grow your professional network, get smarter, research new products and grow your business. I certainly will!

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  • http://www.salespeople.co.za/ Sales People

    I found this while going through the archives of your blog, and just had to throw my opinions on open source software on the table too. As a proud South African I am a great fan of Mark Shuttleworth's and his Ubuntu Linux creation is looking like a formidable challenge to Microsoft's Windows, whatever incarnation it might be in.

    Then we have Open Office kicking Microsoft Office butt, and Firefox and Thunderbird doing the same to IE and Outlook. The bottom line is that the Microsoft model is fast becoming obsolete, and I foresee that Open Source will kill them if they can not adapt.

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