If I were organising a conference, I'd lay out these as my guiding principles: 
1. Attendees are entrusting us with the only resource that is still not a commodity: time and attention. Don't waste an ounce of those. 
2. A conference without a conversation is an MP3 file without timeshifting. 
3. Networking opportunities in the foyer do not excuse bad content in the auditorium. 
4. Advertise clearly who the conference is aimed at, otherwise you'll end up with a lot of people who don't want to be there (and those people may have blogs). 
5. Make explicitly clear on the website before a conference happens who is speaking or on panels - and why. And "because they've paid us" is not a good reason why. 
6. No press desks, no press badges, no special treatment for the media at all. Professional journalists attend on the same terms as anybody else. 
7. Listen to the audience. No, strike that. Listen to the participants. If they've paid for a ticket, you really, really need to listen to them. Do so before, during and after the event - online and offline. And don't just listen. Respond. 
8. If they are unhappy, apologise and refund their tickets. 
9. Cut the goddamn music - this is a conference, not a nightclub. We don't need pounding dance music if the person is interesting. 
10. No adverts on stage - no sponsor logos, no ads on the video. None of that is relevant. If you have sponsors, keep them out of the auditorium. 
11. Advertise the language up front and stick to it. Paying for a ticket only to find people speaking a language that you don't is not acceptable. 
12. Consider scrapping the whole conference thing and just run an unconference instead, like BarCamp or PodCamp or BloggerCon. 
Tags: conferences, conference planning, leweb3, participation, unconference, barcamp, bloggercon, podcamp 
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