Actually Drew, I'd say your 'dream' is totally on-point. The timing is perfect, especially as OOo is getting all this free-buzz about being a force to be reckoned with <smile> and the feds are making delicious noises about requiring Open Document Format...

Also it is propitious that OOo plans to have a 'fresh off the presses' Presentation Kit by the Gov 2.0 May 2010 date, which would extend promotional outreach from any OOo presentation. And the guidelines given on http://www.gov2expo.com/gov2expo2010/public/cfp/82 about presentation development are beautifully done... so whether the presentation we submitted ended up being among the 1% selected, we would still end up with a cohesive structure for an OOo presentation that would be suitable for a range of presentation opportunities, ie: the annual, regional or local OOo conferences and gatherings.

In this regard, I would suggest we develop (as called for in the above referenced guidelines) a set of 4 to 6 '5-minute rapid fire presentation' with the topic for each of these taken from the list provided in the above referenced guidelines, for example:

<> A presentation on how Open Standards work to the benefit of Enterprise Collaboration by making all documents more universally readable. <> A presentation on how Open Standards define and apply the concept of Intellectual Property, using the OOo Productivity Suite as an example. <> A presentation on how Open Standards assist with Procurement Reform, making it easier for procurement officers to compare various products on an 'apples-to-apples' basis and also eliminating systemic problems with application intercompatibility.

Done as short and punchy audio/video 'info-tainment' (with lots of sparkel and dazzle but sans any trace of 'marketing hype'), these savvy newsy-clips would illuminate facts and figures about the 'who, what, when, where, why & how' of Open Standards, ODF and OS... driving home the point that 'this is the way to go' and soft-selling by association our postion that OOo is 'the best way' to "Bridge the Digital Divide, Minimize Citizen Pain, Encourage Creative Thinking and Learn How Less Is More in the Brave New World of Open Standards!"

And if we could additionally muster the forces to exhibit at Gov 2.0, imagine what having a blub about OOo on this page http://www.gov2expo.com/gov2expo2010/public/content/exhibitors would do to our brandname image <grin>, and then study the 'pr opportunities' being coordinated by the expo-hosts http://www.gov2expo.com/gov2expo2010/public/content/pr-opportunities which offer additional avenues of 'getting the word out there' about OOo.

Thus I see this as a marvelous marketing opportunity for OOo which I hope we will -- including Drew's strategy for approaching FEMA, etc. -- seriously discuss as a project worth investing resources in. Also, this integrates nicely with the design and development of the proposed Presentation Kit, my thoughts about which will shortly be posted to that thread.

In the interim, Happy (almost) New Year!!! I'm having a party.... y'all come!!!! ~Christine

----- Original Message ----- From: "Drew Jensen" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, December 30, 2009 12:02 AM
Subject: [marketing] Washington, DC USA is lovely in May


Hi,

Came across this announcement that the call for papers at the Gov 2.0 conference, May 2010 has been extended till Jan. 6th.

http://www.gov2expo.com/gov2expo2010/public/cfp/82

So - Just thought I'd ask if there is anyone with a canned, or time to generate, presentation about the benefits of OO.o AND maybe you would like to visit DC in May?

It really is a beautiful town - It costs though. I can mitigate logging to nil...*smile* (I think)

Timing would be good - there is a lot of chatter within the federal bureaucracy right now about open source software. Sadly the DoD folks seem to be leading the charge. [I used to write software for the Dept. of Def. so don't get me wrong, they're nice enough people..but]

Anyway - I recognize that this isn't likely to happen, and since I'm just dreaming..let me go on.

If i had an ear at a Gov tech conference this year I would head right to the folks at FEMA. (Federal Emergency Management Agency)

I know - you may think no!...Department of Education would be better...but

FEMA because of the large fleet of mobile housing units they maintain, for use after natural disasters. Last year I had the pleasure of getting to know some of the FEMA contractors that disburse the (some of) homes. A pc in each housing unit is a subject that had a lot of traction with them..but no funding.

I'd tell what ever FEMA contact I could make to get me the name of the person running the procurement contract for those PC's and explain the savings that could be had by switching to a FOSS software platform.

..and then comes the part were we find the person in the HHS (Health & Human Services ) and explain how FEMA's needs can be met by having community training centers, such as the one I learned of this September in Columbus, supply the systems as part of their re-cycling efforts. They think it's a great idea - Senators McCain and Reed agree...(yeah)..and pass the funds..

Hey it's just a dream....

Drew



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