Conferences and Trade Shows – The Lie We Tell Ourselves

Every year, organizations spend thousands of dollars to attend conferences, trade shows, annual meetings; organizers spend even more.  

Why?

To share ideas, to learn about new products and services, to reconnect with colleagues and connect with industry leaders. In theory and in popular opinion, the answer would obviously be yes.

If this is true, what is the purpose of this learning and connection? Simply to learn, or should it be to create applied change?

Applied change transforms simply learning from information to transformation. Notes taken into action and, perhaps most importantly, inspired learning to practical implementation.

The Problem

The real failure isn’t the conference, trade show, or meeting; the real problem lies with those who attend. We waste much of these resources and opportunities because we do not have any systems or processes to turn learning, inspiration,  and desire for change into action.

Taking Action – Step 1 Redefine Success

We have to expect more. Simply defining success as “I attended, I learned a lot, and it was  inspiring,” is weak and does not justify the time and costs involved.

These measures are the minimum you and your organization should expect; they define the return on investment just as your organization would for anything else.

Taking Action – Step 2 – Using the 3-Phase Model for Before, During, After  the event

Phase 1: BEFORE – Design your Outcome.

Do this by deciding collaboratively what problem(s) I am trying to solve. What decision do we need clarity on? And what skill(s)/insight(s) would actually change my/our work?

If you don’t define value before you arrive, you’ll accept whatever is presented, whether it helps your team or not.

Phase 2: DURING – Filter, Don’t Collect, work towards your defined definition of success.

Our focus needs to shift from “try to capture everything” to disciplined attention so you can “capture what matters” to accomplish your goals for the event.

  1. Is this useful now, or just interesting?
  2. Where would this actually apply in our organization?
  3. What would I stop doing if I used this?

My advice is to limit your notes to 3–5 key ideas per day and, as part of your notes, begin with the statement, This matters because…”

Phase 3: AFTER – Conversion of Insight into real change

Taking Action – Step 3 – To execute, break the conversion into 3 steps.

1. Reduce – Within 24–48 hours, cut all your notes down to the best and most actionable 3 ideas at a maximum. Why only three? More ideas and concepts means overall less action. If you think this is not enough, recall the previous events attended and take a critical look at what, if anything, changed, and you may find implementing 3 new  ideas will be a dramatic improvement over previous events.

3. Schedule – to implement change and to take action, organizations and team members have to make time to discuss and implement change, regardless of how busy they are. Remember, if it’s not scheduled, it’s not real.

Taking Action – Step 4 – The Organizational Layer  

Most organizations fail at this step. New concepts and ideas will be championed by the event attendee; however, without the support of those who did not attend, or without the support of those in authority, nothing will happen.

Organizations fail here because they have no follow-up structure for event attendance and attendees, no expectation of application, and no accountability for the resources used or their people’s time.

Taking Action – Step 5 – Making Success Tangible

Don’t just define success; show what it turns into.

At the team level, success means developing a shared language for identifying the need for solutions, finding solutions, making them better, and everyone using a shared language. Additionally, an organization that can align its priorities and engage in better conversations will achieve success faster.

Success isn’t what you learned. It’s what’s different now because you were there.

Taking Action – Step 6. Aim to be different.

Create your plan using an “on purpose” strategy for before, during, and after the event, make your choices, and convert them from “some thing interesting” to “noticeable and timely action,” on your return.

The Edge  

I have been to many of these events and have seen essentially two types of attendees. Both kinds attend the event with the best of intentions; they try to see everything, listen to everyone, make notes, and justify their experience and the costs by saying what they learned.

One group collects ideas, but the effects of the events are short-lived because, although the ideas are potentially useful, they have no mechanism to take action on those ideas.

The second, smaller group, is the one that learns, uses these steps, and creates change.

Which group are you?

The difference isn’t what you learned. It’s what you chose to do with it.

Paul

Leave a Reply

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