I’m excited to share more details about TribeCon, a conference about communities – both online and offline. Tiffany Starnes and I have been working for the last six months to put it together along with a lot of help from our Tribal Council and a lot of friends from Net2NO.
We’re producing the conference in partnership with the Voodoo Experience. TribeCon will be the official interactive component of the Voodoo Experience. This is a tremendous opportunity for TribeCon. The Voodoo Experience has grown into a huge annual music festival, and together we can build TribeCon into a integral part of the experience and a major interactive conference.
So let’s get to the details:
Why does TribeCon need New Orleans?
One of the things I’m most excited about is bringing the conversation about authentic online communities to New Orleans. Having the Voodoo Experience has a partner enables us to make this truly a world-class conference. TribeCon connects with New Orleans because we have such a deep sense of community here. From the Mardi Gras indian tribes to front porch neighbors, New Orleans culture is rooted in community. Andrew Larimer, Tim Soslow and Matt Tritico will be curating a special panel presentation that will be a celebration and exploration of community in New Orleans.
Inspired by SXSW, and now TribeCon is just six weeks away.
The idea for TribeCon was inspired on the Y@ Pack trip to SXSW organized by the Net2NO community. We had such an amazing experience together, and it was truly amazing what a motivated community can accomplish. On the bus ride back from SXSW in March, we hatched the idea for TribeCon. We pitched it at the GNO Inc Digital Media Alliance meeting in May, and though I regrettably made a couple of miscues in my pitch (ugh), we started to line up support and Robbie Vitrano helped us line up meetings with Rehage Entertainment.
So after a long summer of laying the ground work, here we are, just six weeks away from the inaugural TribeCon, with a supportive partner in the Voodoo Experience and a tremendous slate of speakers. Tiffany and I are both getting much less sleep these days, but we’re doing it, and really excited about producing TribeCon.
TribeCon is important to the tech community, and important to New Orleans.
So, you’re interested in getting involved?
Fantastic. We need your help to make this a success.
Thanks to everyone for all your support. We’re excited to present TribeCon and connect with the community.
Have more questions? Hit me up in the comments! Thanks.
We’re back from SXSW and I was invited to present a review of the Net2NO Y@ Pack’s efforts at the Digital Media Alliance (DMA) yesterday. It is great to see the DMA gaining steam and taking an active leadership role in the New Orleans tech community.
While I was tapped to present the results from the SXSW road trip, I have to say that it was a total team collaborative effort. The leadership of Damien Lamanna, Jessica Rohloff, Adele Tiblier, Tiffany Starnes & Andrew Larimer was what made this trip possible. And of course the support from GNO, DDD, City of NO, and all our sponsors. We’ll be posting a case study that is being put together very shortly with success metrics, but I wanted to convey how impactful the support of the trip was in terms of raising awareness about the New Orleans tech scene.
On the way home from SXSW, Tiffany Starnes, Adele Tiblier & I spent eight hours brainstorming on a bus about what we wanted to do next, how we were going to capture and build on this momentum. We kept coming back to community. We got home and tore through Seth Godin’s Tribes, and started bouncing the idea off people we respected, forming a Tribal Council. Today, we’re pleased to present our conference idea that heretofore has been under wraps.
What is happening in New Orleans right now is just a microcosm of what is happening all over the world. Traditional organizations with top down power structures are giving way to grass roots community-driven movements. Let’s call them tribes. These tribes self organize and galvanize to action. Let’s put a conference on to explore this phenomenon:
The Tribe Conference is a conference for people passionate about building communities. Over the last several years there has been an explosion of grass roots organizations that have been built through connecting people online with the mission of spurring action offline. These communities have developed organically and have consolidated national and international presence through websites, wikis, and branding. The communities are very grass roots and inherently local. As these communities evolve, there is a further need to facilitate a sharing of ideas, best practices, and development of a national community for the growth of all of these movements. The Voodoo Tribe conference mission will be to educate and connect communities, with a focus on the exchange of ideas about common ties of community-building, rather than a focus on what the communities do.
When we look at the ideal time for a conference like this in New Orleans, it fits well with the Voodoo Music Fest which is a great music festival around Halloween each year. The ethos of the music fest fits well with the idea for this conference too. I’d be interested in feedback on whether that timing is a draw or a drawback. We believe people like to come to New Orleans around great events like that to get some of the New Orleans cultural experience in addition to the conference.
The communities we would be interested in reaching out to are the ones that share these common threads:
- unconferences / unorganizations / movements / tribes
- web-based self organization through twitter, facebook, wikis, meetup.com, google groups, etc
- grass-roots but part of a larger national & international movement that people have simply picked up and run with
- Examples: Net Squared, BarCamps, WordCamps, Co-working, Ignite, Social Media Club
Want to learn more? Contact me, Tiffany or Adele. Want to be a part of the movement? Join our Tribal Council. Let’s make this happen together.