Le Web comes a long way from “worst tech conference ever”

by Kris_Tuttle on December 11, 2008

Years ago we were at Le Web in Paris on the famous day when the orga­niz­ers pre-empted the event with a series of polit­i­cal stump speeches (in French no less) to an infu­ri­ated audience.

This year the event was an unqual­i­fied suc­cess in our view although like all such events there are always arm­chair crit­ics out there snip­ing away at it. (Run­ning a con­fer­ence of scale is a tough prob­lem that breaks the best of them.  Try it if you dare.)

We will pub­lish the usual con­tent sum­mary note next week but in terms of the event we would high­light the fol­low­ing points:

  1. What the agenda lacked in “tech heavy” con­tent it more than made up for with some very high cal­iber pre­sen­ters.  Although like all large events the big spon­sors got pre­sen­ta­tion slots they sent good peo­ple.  Every­one was very impressed with Marissa from Google and even Microsoft made some real progress.  Hav­ing some notable Amer­i­cans fly over (Robert Scoble, Mike Arring­ton, Doc Searls, Kara Swisher to name some) made the inter­ac­tion more interesting.
  2. Although Loic made a big mis­take with the politi­cos years ago he scored a huge win with Chris­tine Lagarde who is the Min­ster of Finance of France.  We’ve lived in France for four years and have never seri­ously con­sid­ered prac­tic­ing our tech­nol­ogy advi­sory work locally here but after see­ing her it’s pretty clear that France may be imple­ment­ing some pro­grams that will change the game. 
  3. Hav­ing lots going on at once gives every­one some­thing to do.  The start-up com­pe­ti­tion was mobbed (and warm by that virtue as well) and had one of the top three show­cases of emerg­ing tech­nol­ogy com­pa­nies we have seen at any con­fer­ence in the world.  Beyond that the expo rooms had things to see and Google and Face­book put rooms with pro­grams together too. 
  4. As usual lots of dis­cus­sion and net­work­ing was going on.  Le Web has always been fairly laid back with few peo­ple just sit­ting there lis­ten­ing to the pre­sen­ta­tions.  This venue made it even more entic­ing for peo­ple to be around the talks but really doing their own thing, hav­ing dis­cus­sions and meet­ing peo­ple.  The event is espe­cially good for the young crowd that really enjoys mix­ing it up with the crowd.

Part of Le Web is com­ing with the right atti­tude. Le Web was never about incred­i­ble deep tech­nol­ogy insights but rather about see­ing a bunch of inter­est­ing con­tent and bits of tech­nol­ogy from around Europe and inter­act with new peo­ple while doing some cre­ative work your­self.  You also can’t just sit back at Le Web and expect it all to come to you. Move around and you’ll find hap­pi­ness.  (It’s okay to expect heat, net­work con­nec­tions and food but some of these were cir­cum­stances only par­tially in con­trol of the orga­niz­ing team.)

If I had to posi­tion it I’d say it’s kind of between an O’Reilly ETech and a TED.  It still needs to find more of a brand iden­tity and har­mo­nize with that.  For exam­ple how nice should the food and din­ner events be?  For a poor 23 year old they were fine. For a 40 year old cor­po­rate exec­u­tive or ven­ture cap­i­tal­ists they were totally unac­cept­able.  (Remem­ber you’re try­ing to get these types together right?)

All con­fer­ences suf­fer a bit in the online world today.  We can get so much done and par­tic­i­pate remotely (usu­ally for free) it makes it hard to jus­tify the time and expense required to go some­where.  But Le Web was worth the time.  The sec­ond day was inspir­ing, espe­cially the after­noon.  That alone was worth the trip.

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