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For me, I like a little variety in my life. Ground-up events like BarCamp and Ignite Philly are great, but there's nothing wrong with a little structure now and then. The two approaches appeal to different people, so you meet different people and hear about different slices of life. No one thing satisfies all the people. You gotta communicate with your audience the way your audience wants to hear it.
If you truly want to evangelize this new approach to working, to organizing conferences, and to innovation, then shouldn't you be taking your message to the people who need to hear it the most -- the ones stuck in a top-down conference on innovation? Sure, the message is likely to fall on deaf ears, but there are some who will hear and take it to heart.
Of course, you are entirely within your rights to say, "I feel uncomfortable in top-down situations and I do not want to be part of one."
For your right.
To PARTY.
True.
Are you SURE that what you've stated above is the real reason you're not participating? Or, is it true that you were initially enthralled with the prospect of participating, told them how excited you were, only to then demand to be paid for appearing and learn you weren't going to be?
Self-serving posts like yours above reflect part of the problem within Philly. Such provinciality helps nobody - including you. Innovation Philly is trying to be part of the solution. This conference will give people ideas to solve problems and make progress in our community. If you're really committed to helping the community, why did you demand payment and then write this nonsense? After all, who does this serve?
Seriously - Why be a hater?
I will admit to is the fact that when I asked it was because I knew the answer was going to be no. I was considering an easy out, and simply walking away from this event that I was uncomfortable with being involved with.
When I talked through it with a number of people, it became clear to me that I needed to take a stand for what I really was unhappy with: not lack of payment. I am speaking on October 6th at an event in Phoenix unpaid, because the topic presented was clearly defined ahead of time. The difference is, while the event is largely corporate, but they're not pretending to be something they are not.
You don't need to give the community ideas to solve problems. They've already got them. Attend a Refresh Philly, Barcamp, Junto, or Ignite.
Progress comes from the ground up, not by handing out resources.
That's the difference that I am trying to articulate: people are already doing this stuff.
It either grows out of an organic community or it is organized by a top-down entity.
You can't have it both ways.
If you were offered an editorial board with the Wall Street Journal, would you decline it because that organization is "too top down" for you? Doesn't that sound silly?
I, like Peter, am helping Kelly with this event. I'm doing so because it's a good event that is dedicated to a cause I favor - and because I can. No high horse here - just a focus on results.
The same results we all favor. Right, Alex?