Get SXSW Slides

There are only two of us, and we’re making it to as many sessions as we can, but if you’d like to see some slides from additional sessions at SXSW, take a look here (if you have access to slideshare.net) – http://www.slideshare.net/tag/sxsw2010

View more presentations from Daniel Burka.

ROWE: No schedules, no meetings, no joke.

Imagine a work environment where you work when you want, how you want, and where you choose. A work environment where strict accountability for results is the norm. It’s simple: If you don’t deliver results, you don’t have a job.

That’s the premise of the Results-Oriented Work Environment (ROWE), a concept pioneered and implemented by Cali Ressler and Jody Thompson when they were co-workers at Best Buy. It’s also the topic of their book, “Why Work Sucks and How to Fix it.”

I met them at a South by Southwest panel today, where they were by joined by workplace author and Wall Street Journal columnist, Alexandria Levit, and two CEOs of organizations that have implemented ROWE.

It was an honest discussion of the challenges and benefits, and the cultural shift required for ROWE to work. There’s a summary of the discussion here and more at GO ROWE.

Panelists: @jessicalawrence, @jeffgunther, @caliandjody, @alevit. Meet them on YouTube.

Gary Vaynerchuk Now

Here’s a quick video from the Gary Vaynerchuk presentation going on right now.

SXSW: Bizness, brews, and bonding

It’s Sunday night and I’ve landed in one of the many South by Southwest lounges – with a cold Lone Star Beer at my side and blisters on my feet.

There is significant party cred attached to the SXSW franchise, and no shortage of (free) drinks and (free) food to be found at the Austin Convention Center and beyond. But that’s just one small piece of a cozy conference vibe that fosters a culture of work hard, play hard, and get to know each other. (Related story: Booze and Blogging.)

Make no mistake about it: SXSWi is a five-day marathon. The choice of sessions, panels, workshops, keynotes, and meetups is overwhelming. And with two more days yet to go, it was energizing to hear from many of you over the weekend who were following along on Twitter and foursquare. What a great blend of technology and inclusion.

Thanks to a tip from @briansullan, I tracked down Web standards guru and author, Jeffrey Zeldman, and co-author, Ethan Marcotte. Ed Matesevac, @ep3runs, turned me on to Dan Ariely––an acclaimed professor at Duke University and best-selling author of “Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces that Shape Our Decisions.”I also noted Company partners outside our department tapping into Twitter and retweeting some of our live-blogging. Thanks for joining us!

SXSW Interactive ends Tuesday night and we’ll keep bringing it to you until then.

Creativity Through Play

Presenter: Sara Summers, User Experience Evangelist for Microsoft

Play is important, particularly in the workplace.  Science (lead by Dr. Stuart Brown at The Institute of Play) has proven that a life without play leads to depression, rigidity, and dissocial activities.  It’s critical, not just to our well being, but for adaptation and idea generation.  It’s proven that play drives us to seek novelty and newness.

Play elicits our best qualities – it inspires empathy, helpfulness, hopefulness, and betters emotions.  It’s crucial to visual thinking and processing.  Dr. Robert Epstein’s “Shifting” suggests a period of individual ideation, followed by group building and generation produces significantly better ideas.

“To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk.” -Thomas Edison

It’s a short blog post, but most of this workshop involved hands on play and brainstorming to illustrate the points made.

A period of individual ideation, followed by group building and generation produces significantly better ideas. – Dr. Robert Epstein #sxsw

Booze and Blogging

Presenters: @livethelushlife, @bebellanti, @johnwise, @titosvodka, @thrillist

It’s 5 pm on Saturday, so I’m “off the clock.”  That’s why my last SXSW session was this one.  BONUS: This one involved trying booze while I was blogging this (see the picture here).

First, I learned that the first “viral drink” is the “Pickelback” (seen here) which involves taking a shot of Jamison Whisky and then a shot of pickel juice.  The pickel juice completely eliminates the whisky flavor and leaves a little warm spot in your belly.  It became a “viral drink” after it was reported that Pickles were more popular than Canadian rockers Nickelback on Facebook.

Tito’s Vodka has become a “word of mouth” brand here in Austin and has spread.  It started to spread locally, but took off with the introduction of Twitter.  Now they’ve moved to Facebook and try to enable others to “share the Tito’s love.”  They’ve started doing a newsletter and videos on Twitter.   There’s more to it than just vodka, Tito has a real story and according to the presenter, he’s a “love bomb.”  His video outakes are “YouTube gold.”  There is a man behind the brand and their marketing team makes efforts to be personable and show that there are real people behind the brand.

It’s not all fun and drinking.  Bloggers/marketers in this area have to follow liquor laws and regulations and are held to the same marketing measurement standards as any other group.  However, social media is social and it is particularly effective in this industry.

SXSW Scene: Who’s the dude playing four square?

Foursquare playing foursquareKoz and I were leaving the Austin Convention Center tonight and saw these guys playing four square right outside the doors. We stopped to watch and take a few pictures.

It was a fun, retro moment that reminded me of what four square used to mean … and of the new meaning it has taken on in the age of social media.

Little did we know that the guy in the blue shirt in this friendly game was one of the founders of foursquare, Dennis Crowley.


While other up-and-coming brands are spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to get their buzz on at South by Southwest Interactive, this simple game (which cost about $5.99 in sidewalk chalk) had people lined up to play.