I love doing live conferences. The ones I do are available as podcasts
through Talkshoe and can be downloaded, but I prefer the live part.
Plus, because I know they can be downloaded, I tend to want to edit
them to sound a little less idiotic. Fortunately, I'm also very lazy,
so I rarely edit unless something happens that needs to be rearranged.
Last week, Tom Cannavan got cut off for a bit and I did edit and
reorder things, removing the wait for him to call back.
Two years ago, Talkshoe CEO Dave Nelsen worked with me on producing
the first live 24 hour Kivathon, which was a terrific success,
bringing a lot of awareness to what was then not very well-known.
Since that time, Kiva has become so successful, you literally have to
wait in line to loan! Oprah and Bill Clinton's book are largely to
thank for that. Dave and I both very much enjoyed the fact that we
were able to have fun and pay back some of the amazing and wonderful
things the Internet has brought us.
Anyway, talking with a few friends about the whole Talkshoe thing made
me go take a look at the statistics for the conferences and I was a
little surprised to see that for the New Wine Consumer, which has few
live participants, the average download number for a particular
session is around 800. This is a small number compared to popular tech
casts like TWIT, where at least 200,000 people are hearing it each week. On
the other hand, those 800 unique IP downloads measured by Talkshoe are
people who actually listen to the recordings. We know that to be
motivated enough to click on listen or download, people are interested
in the subject on some level, whether professional or amateur.
Remember, those page views you see for your blog have plenty of chaff
with the wheat, lots of robots, lots of people wandered there by
accident but are not interested, lots of everything but your target
audience.
For the VoIP Users Conference (running 2 years since March 2007) we
have a highly focused group with an average of 30 live callers each
week. When we had Asterisk creator Mark Spencer on and simulcast in
video, we had about 100 live. I also did a live session with Chris
Brogan for his Grasshoppers initiative and there too we had over 100
people. The conference has not one but several sponsors.
Advertisers haven't come around in droves yet to understand the
podcast paradigm, although Leo Laporte has more than proven its value.
When a site is mentioned live on TWIT, it usually brings down the
server almost immediately.
I think we are still waiting for the easy way to join the
conversation. Twitter proves that "if you build it easy, they will
come". I am trying various methods to allow Skype with its millions of
users to call in to our conferences. One of these days I will find a
way to make this work reliably. If, in the meantime the applications
for iPhone etc begin to work well, things like Gizmo5 and iPhone Skype
app, the whole thing may be an enabler. If and when this happens, I
will be looking for communities to help make use of this technology
and I have the experience and ideas to make it work, I hope.
Incidentally, speaking of Gizmo and Skype, Michael Robertson is our guest
this Friday to talk about Gizmo5 and OpenSky.