Sunday, June 10, 2012

#Interop Goes YoYo

http://www.internetnews.com/blog/skerner/interop-goes-yoyo.html


#Interop Goes YoYo


f5 claw InteropFrom the 'Yo Yo Network' files:
There is never a shortage of interesting things that show up on the show floor of a conference, Interop 2012 is no exception.
While there is no boxing ring with fighters this year (thnx Xirrus!), there were some interesting 'shenanigans' that vendors had to try and entice people.

F5 had THE CLAW as a way to grab your schwag, which was kinda neat. There are always the magician types, the hot cars and motorcycles. This year, vendor ExtraHop has the U.S. YoYo champion.


And yes, for the record it did get me stop at the ExtraHop booth.

Lucky for you dear reader, I also recorded it so you too can enjoy the intersection of the YoYo and enterprise IT.




 said on May 10, 2012 at 9:23 am

This guy is Joseph Harris. He also does this trick where he knocked a dime off an Interop attendee's ear with a yo-yo! You can check out a video of that on the ExtraHop YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wDckfFn2fVY




Buskers: Better Than Booth Babes

http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/80533


Rikki Endsley

Buskers: Better Than Booth Babes

Whereas other Interop vendors recently blew bucks on booth babes, ExtraHop got props for entertaining attendees with hourly performances by national yo-yo champion Joseph Harris. Please tell me this is the future of IT events!

By Rikki Endsley on Fri, 05/11/12 - 6:46pm.
Years ago I worked for a large company that hired "booth babes" to "help" us run our booth at LinuxWorld in New York. These hired models sat on stools and gossiped with each other as I and another editor — also a woman — talked to attendees and gave out free copies of our magazine. What a waste of money those models turned out to be. Thankfully, I've never been stuck (wo)manning a booth with one since then. Maybe there's a time and place for models at expo halls, but I assure you that it's not at IT-related events.
If you want more bang for your buck — and why wouldn't you? — take notes from ExtraHop Networks. In his Beyond Booth Babes at Interop article (which includes a great video interview with ExtraHop staff), Matt Heusser gives thumbs down to vendors who go the booth babe route in an effort to attract attendees.
"My objection today is not a PC one," Heusser explains. "My hobby horse is not getting more women in tech (though I think that is noble), but instead that 'because it works' is lazy. Should we do something silly, ridiculous, inappropriate, and insulting just because it works?"
Women are clearly the minority on almost any — perhaps, all — IT event expo floors. Still, those of us who are there won't be drawn to your booth because you hired a model. I'd argue that few (if any) men are drawn to booths because of attractive women on display, either. Ideally, your product or service is sexy enough on its own. If not, maybe you can throw in some food, booze, shiny giveaways, prizedrawings, or Guitar Hero.
Yawn.
Don't get me wrong — I like a free beer and pretzel as much as the next lady. But I doubt I'll remember who handed out which snack or hosted the Wii Bowling. Throw in a yo yo champ? I'm not going to forget it.
Brilliant, ExtraHop! Truly brilliant. Working it into your marketing message? Even better: "Because the ExtraHop system will help you spend less time sifting through packet dumps and more time practicing yo-yo tricks like walking the dog!"
"We get tons of crowds for his show, people hang out and get a demo afterwards," says Briana Pettigrew, Marketing Manager at ExtraHop Networks. "It's been really fun." (And no ears were harmedin the yo-yo tricks.)
Heusser agrees and writes, "Way to go, Extrahop. You actually thought about how to deliver something to reach the audience in a way that was professional, meaningful, fun, and I could take pictures and tell my family without feeling … icky."
My hometown has a Busker Fest every August, and we all look forward to it each year. I suspect you'd get some complaints for hiring MamaLou Strongwoman (but they wouldn't come from me). Throw in a clown, on the other hand, and I'll be the first to throw a fit. And don't even talk to me about mimes.
What about a juggler who uses motherboards and tablets? Or a Rubik's cube champ? How about some card tricks? I'd even settle for some decent balloon animals or the gold-painted people who just stand there like statues, for crying out loud. But please, no clowns or mimes.



Besting the Booth Babe Trade Show Strategy

http://www.marchpr.com/blog/2012/05/besting-the-booth-babe-trade-show-strategy/


Besting the Booth Babe Trade Show Strategy

As you would expect from any major tech trade show, last week’s Interop event in Las Vegas generated quite a bit of buzz around new announcements, technologyinnovations and partnerships. But, one thing I didn’t expect to see so much coverage around was the continued use of “Booth Babes.” While booth babes are getting increasingly negative exposure, several of March’s clients who were in attendance at Interop this year found creative ways around this tactic – and to great effect!
For those unfamiliar with the term, booth babes are essentially spokesmodels that companies hire to augment their staff at high-traffic events in order to draw in a crowd. Usually very young and attractive women, booth babes have gotten a lot of negative attention in the past few years for dressing too provocatively and being nothing more than a distraction at these predominately male-attended IT events. And, this year, Interop was no exception.
Journalist Shamus McGillicuddy of TechTarget’s SearchNetworking.com notes, “the companies that hire [booth babes] do a grave disservice to the industry… I lose a lot of respect for companies who rely on them.”
Indeed, this is how many trade show attendees and other journalists feel, especially the successful, tech-savvy women who are typically outnumbered 10 to 1 at events like Interop. McGillicuddy even says that he refuses “to stop at any booth that features these women.” So, while companies may be able to collect a few more leads as a result of their alluring spokesmodels, it could hinder their press exposure as booth babes are a clear deterrent for a growing percentage of trade show attendees, including respected journalists like McGillicuddy.
While booth babes may cast a negative light over companies choosing to employ them, March’s clients CloudSigma and ExtraHop Networks found creative ways around this tactic at this year’s Interop Las Vegas event. Instead of booth babes, CloudSigma brought on a Spock look-a-like (who was 6’ 8”!) to help attract attendees to its booth, which generated a lot of buzz at the event and on social sites like Twitter, even putting it in the running for the “best Interop booth” prize.
Similarly, ExtraHop employed Yo Yo Joe, the U.S. national yo-yo champion, to draw attention to its booth with impressive yo-yo routines set to music and various tricks, including knocking a dime off an attendee’s ear! Coupled with an ExtraHop-branded yo-yo giveaway, ExtraHop attracted a large crowd at the show and got significant recognition from attendees and press alike.
These impressive trade show tactics were not only infinitely more respectable than hiring booth babes, but were far more successful in attracting crowds and generating buzz. As an industry, we can only hope that such creative tactics as Spock and Yo Yo Joe will be the future of technology trade shows. Our hats go off to companies like our clients CloudSigma and ExtraHop for spearheading this movement.

Beyond Booth Babes at Interop

http://itknowledgeexchange.techtarget.com/unchartered-waters/beyond-booth-babes-at-interop/

Unchartered Waters « Considering Conferences - IIWhat happens in Vegas Part I » MAY 11 2012 10:21AM GMT

 Beyond Booth Babes at Interop
 Posted by: Matt Heusser Interop, IT, extrahop 36 tweets retweet

LAS VEGAS, NV - With a few hundred booths at interop this year, it’s no surprise that some vendors would augment their staff with temporary employees designed to draw the attention of the crowd.

Given that IT is something like 90% male, it isn’t a huge surprise that many of these are female.

However, I have to say, it was a pretty big personal surprise to me how some of them were dressed. 

Mini-skirts with fishnet stockings, tight racing outfits (with the zipper half-way down), and midriff-baring leather biker tank-tops. I can’t make this up, and I wasn’t the only person to notice.

When I initially saw this, I was more than a little shocked. The journalist in me took over, and I took a few pictures for the blog, to talk about how horrible it all is.

I have honestly never felt dirty as a journalist. Until today.

I don’t need to publish those pictures; if you want to see them, you can go Google “Booth Babe Interop” yourself and see plenty.

More than don’t need to publish, it would be a sort of exploitation to publish them; I’d be ‘outraged’ yet using the pictures to generate clicks, and I think my readers deserve better.

Why the Babes, Race Cars and Motor Bikes

Apparently because they work. No, really, seriously, having attractive females and race cars seems to draw people into the booth, so the vendor can scan a badge, and, to some extent, scanning a badge is a numbers game that leads to sales.

It’s sad, and it encourages the sort of objectivism of women that leads to the brogramming mentality, which makes it harder for women to enter the workforce, which leads to all male conferences, and all-male attendees will pay attention to … you get it.

My objection today is not a PC one. My hobby horse is not getting more women in tech (though I think that is noble), but instead that “because it works” is lazy. Should we do something silly, ridiculous, inappropriate, and insulting just because it works?

In January, I was in times square, and a guy handed me a flier for a strip club. I looked him in the eye, and said “You can do something better with your life than this.” His reply boiled down to something like “Hey man, it pays the bills.”

A Better Way

Instead of pandering with pictures, please allow me to tell you a story about a company that is doing it one better: ExtraHop, a company that provides tools for application performance management and monitoring. Like everyone else, Extrahop realized that they needed to do something different, to get people to at least listen to the pitch, so they hired a national champion yo-yo player to do tricks and demos in an appropriate way.

That was worth seeing, and I caught it on film:



Way to go, Extrahop. You actually thought about how to deliver something to reach the audience in a way that was professional, meaningful, fun, and I could take pictures and tell my family without feeling … icky. 

Let’s all find out Extrahops, and celebrate them.

Better yet: Let’s go make the world a better place ourselves, with this as an example.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

MY AWESOME BUSY SATURDAY; NOV 20TH

A blog post on my blog! That's how the day started followed by YoYo club in Alameda then off to San Jose for a non-yoyo related dinner.

Great day...what made my day even better was when I get a text from Grant saying
GRANT 933PM: Your yoyo sold out within minutes here at 44clash. Congrats!


Yup. Let's keep the momentum going baby! Check out the blog post below...if you live in the city, YOU SHOULD DEFINITELY CHECK IT OUT!!!! IT CLOSES AT THE END OF THE MONTH SO GO NOW.

Live and In Person! Saturday at SOMArts, 2-4pm
Posted: November 19th, 2010 | Author: julie | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »

from Rick Prelinger’s Lost Landscapes of San Francisco Vol. 4, now playing in the video annex as part of the I Live Here:SF show @ SOMArts

***

One of the best parts of doing this photo/portrait project has been the exposure to the incredible array of talent and stories and experience that my subjects have to share. When I found that I had been accepted at SOMArts as the first recipient of their Commons Curatorial Grant, my thought was how I could bring as many of these people to meet a new audience? Several events were planned, besides, the opening and closing receptions, to take advantage of this wealth of true San Franciscan character.

An extremely special part of this exhibit has been the constant screening in the video annex, generously provided by film archivist Rick Prelinger. His amazing montages of collected ephemeral films, the Lost Landscapes of San Francisco series, generally can only be seen for one or two night a year. I have felt extremely fortunate that Rick has so graciously given his most recent film to be seen and enjoyed during the entire month that I Live Here:SF is installed in the main gallery at SOMArts. The film plays continuously so you can watch it for as long as you like.

What’s even better is that Rick will be speaking about his work this Saturday, November 20 in the main gallery, as part of a panel. I am thrilled to have you all visit the gallery, and hear Rick and the other panelists talk about their personal San Francisco, what they’re doing now and you can ask them questions and get to know them.

Also scheduled to present are Mark Bitter, whom you’ll remember as the subject of the wonderful documentary The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill, cyclist/fashionista/coffee expert Meli of Bikes and the City, community advocates who work in a variety of places in the city and with diverse populations: Colleen, Valerie, Morgan and Jose-Luis, and even National Yo-Yo champion Joseph Harris. I hope Wardell the Wonder will make an appearance and talk about his car, the Star One.

All in all, it should be a great afternoon. I hope you can join us, and please, bring a friend!

Date: Saturday, November 20, 2-4pm in the Main Gallery

SOMArts
934 Brannan Street

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

UNLEASHED TEASER

Thank you Gabe, Johnny, James, and YoYoJam for making this possible.

Enjoy! And good luck to Team YoYoJam at 44 clash this weekend, I wish I could be there...

Unleashed Teaser from Sector Y on Vimeo.

YoYoJam's new 2A yoyo is debuting at 44 Clash. It is Joseph Harris' signature model, "Unleashed."

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Another email

I enjoy going through old accounts to see encouraging words about my yoyo prowess.

yoyojam