Posted by Eugene Volokh:
Tips for Organizing Conferences:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_01_25-2009_01_31.shtml#1233079812


   I recently thought of a few tips for organizing conferences, which
   might be especially useful for law review editors, since they come and
   go each year and often can't learn from the experiences of their
   predecessors:

   1. Print people's names on their name tags in a large font. One
   function of a name tag is so that people who have forgotten other
   people can pretend to recognize them. Having to squint at the name tag
   and then say "Oh, Pete, great to see you again!" defeats this purpose.

   2. Enforce time limits for panelists (which is to say by telling them
   the time is up, and expecting them to take no more than a minute or
   two to wrap up after that), though give several warnings at fixed
   times before the time limit.

   3. Don't leave this time limit enforcements to the moderators: They're
   generally on the same podium as the speakers, and it's distracting to
   the speaker and the audience for the moderators to keep passing pieces
   of paper labeled "5 minutes," "2 minutes," "Time," and so on to the
   speaker. Instead, have someone in the audience in the speaker's field
   of vision putting up "X minutes left" signs. (Having a counting second
   timer at the lectern is an alternative, but they need to be reset
   after each speaker, and it's possible that speakers will tune them out
   in a way that they're not likely to tune out the signs.)

   If you have more suggestions, please post them in the comments.

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