0 Comment(s) 14/04/2008 +0100 GMT
by Peter Dunkley
Here's a question. If virtual worlds represent such a challenge to
the meetings and events industries, then why are none of the biggest
events about them actually held in Second Life? This month has seen
Virtual Worlds 2008 take place in New York, the organisers of which
have announced a new event in London later this year. We have also had
the dates confirmed for the second Virtual Worlds Forum (VWF), to be
held in London from 11-13 November. This is the largest of the European
events and is the centrepiece of the Virtual Economic Forum (virtualeconomicforum.com),
which describes itself as "a media company and think-tank delivering
events, online content and networking to the virtual worlds...community"
The
inaugural VWF event was held last October at the (now closed) Canvas,
in Kings Cross, London over four days. Workshops supported the main
conference and expo, bringing together an audience ranging from the
deeply committed to the mildly curious across all aspects of virtual
worlds. The impressive speaker list was headed up by Lord Putnam, and
included many of the great and good in virtual world developments. The
success of this event was reflected in the media coverage, with the BBC
and most of the quality press featuring stories from the show.
Keeping it real
There
are good reasons why these events are sticking with real events at real
venues, but the most important has to be the potential to attract a
large audience paying real-world prices. Many of the people that are
interested in the commercial potential of these environments and who
are happy enough to pay conference prices, won't even have an avatar,
let alone be able to navigate it around a crowded virtual expo.
Credit,
then, to Nick Wilson of Clever Zebra who has announced a purely virtual
event, to be held in Second Life on the 24-27 April. The main sponsor
is to be Kelly Services and the keynote speakers include Forrester's
Erica Driver and IBM's Sandra Kearney. The event is to have four
streams focusing on collaboration, education, marketing and commerce.
For those in the events industry keen to understand what's happening in
virtual worlds this should be a good opportunity. Registration is now
open cleverzebra.com/vbusiness.
Virtual portfolio
Among
those that will be keeping an eye on these developments is Sasha
Frieze, Virtual Economic Forum's CEO. Sasha has no firm plans to run
events virtually just yet, but is considering their place in her
portfolio for the future. She is, however, already using her Second
Life facilities for meetings with potential sponsors, speakers and
partners. As is appropriate for a conference organiser in the social
media space, Sasha sees real value in blogging and podcasts to keep the
meetings and event communities engaged, but she is also running monthly
Salons at the Hospital Club in London's Covent Garden.
These
events are currently free, but places are limited and the first two
were fully booked within 90 minutes. As the participants for the first
two salons have included many of the significant European virtual
worlds players it is worth registering for future events if you are at
all interested in how these environments are developing. There's no
date yet for the next Salon, but Sasha says that it will be held in May.
Peter Dunkley is director of virtual world consulting agency depo consulting







































