This past month I presented at my 10th HOW Conference, a relationship that started with the MYOB Conference held in Phoenix, AZ back in 2002. The honor has been all mine to work, year after year, with incredible folks like Bryn Mooth, Megan Patrick, Beth Dean, Heather Griffith and Lyn Menke. I’ve been invited to speak at other association gatherings, industry conferences and corporate events but it’s the invitation I get from one of these lovely ladies at HOW that always makes its way to the top of my list of “must attends”.
I’m often asked, “Why the HOW Conference? Why any conference for that matter?” I’ve got an answer for that and I’ll split up my ideas in three separate posts just so I can give each it’s due time in the spotlight. First of all, the general idea behind attending an industry conference is two-fold: to stay plugged in and to recharge. Industry conferences offer an element of newness and insight into what’s current in the industry and where the industry is going in the future. Besides, you’ve got to get out of the office and see what is going on outside of your cubicle walls.
Most importantly, you have to connect with like-minded individuals who understand your profession, deal with many of the same issues and can encourage you to grow in your skills. The HOW Conference has a community vibe that isn’t present in most of the conferences I’ve attended. The sponsored networking events are nice and give you a chance to meet some new people but there is something magical about lunchtime, happy hour, dinner and after hours at the conference. It’s a time to connect outside of the conference walls and really get to know your fellow attendees.
If you open yourself to possibility, amazing relationships can be ignited. These relationships can make such a difference in your career, not because you are offered a job but because you are offered a hand and can give one back. As an independent, you are not going find new clients among your fellow designers. Nor are you going find managers wearing billboards advertising job opportunities. What you are going to find is people that can elevate your confidence, push you towards your goals and support you though thick and thin. This doesn’t happen immediately and it takes effort and care to foster lasting relationships with your colleagues – but it is so worth it!
If you attended the HOW Conference in Denver, you took the first step. Hopefully, while you were there you didn’t walk around passing out business cards as if the cure for cancer was written on the back. Studio tours are a must as you are able to interact with the same group of people for a concentrated period of time becoming aware of possible connections. Workshops also give you a great opportunity to interact with attendees in a concentrated and personal manner. Use roundtable opportunities as well and always greet speakers after their sessions. This is so effective because you are standing in a group of people, introductions are being made, questions are being asked and you have yet another opportunity to connect. The people you already know are a great resource for new connections, too. Be wiling to be introduced and engage in conversation. Some of the best friends are made through an introduction of someone you already know.
By the end of the conference you should have a minimum of three people you connect with and will very deliberately pursue once you arrive home. This last conference I walked away with five people I added to my “connection journal” and another six people whom I already knew but am determined to work towards developing a deeper connection. The simple truth is making a few deep connection that will last throughout the years is so much more valuable than obtaining 100s of new acquaintances.
The HOW Conference is a wonderful incubator for friendships, both personal and professional. Each time I attend, I am reconnected with dozens of people as if it’s a giant family reunion where I get to see folks I don’t see very often and probably won’t see again until the next conference. My experiences over the past nine years have led to some of my deepest friendships. From these friendships have come multiple business opportunities, renewed vigor in the path I’m taking and the constant joy of knowing I’ve got great people out there that have got my back and are keeping me top of mind as they grow in their own lives.
Next up: Why the HOW Conference… EDUCATION
For more information on the HOW Conference, visit http://howconference.com






For those who were able to attend my session at the last week’s 2010 Denver-edition of the HOW Conference on “Connect-working” (I’m renaming the net working lunch next year!), you know that one of my major objectives to pass on to the group was to section off five cards collected in the process of meeting people by the end of the conference and save them from the crushing death of the “business card graveyard… that dirty rubber-banded stand of passive “do not calls” that you accepted politely during the week. Well, I hope you know that it’s not all smoke and I am subject to my own rules and objectives. That’s just how I get down. So here are my “5″ (+ 1) examples where mere cards became stories, and thusly real connections that I have now added to my creative circle and life on the whole:



