visit
1. Sign up. Buy tickets early at a discounted price such as Women in Tech or find someone who’s going to attend. Receive a registration code. The most difficult step is over and WS is now in your pocket.
2. Shortly before Web Summit you will get a code to activate in a mobile app.
3. Launch Web Summit app in an Android emulator on your PC to parse data conveniently.
4. Log in.
5. Get a list of companies and people who go to Web Summit.
6. Analyze industries, positions in detail and choose what you need.
7. Create your custom Ideal Customer Profile – read for more details.
8. Segmentation of visitors based on ICP
9. Generate a business email template.
10. Generate participants’ emails using tools, or better manually.
11. Validate all emails to avoid spam filters.
12. Set up an email campaign, possibly an A/B test on small audiences.
13. At this point, Web Summit is over, everyone’s going home.
14. Set up a custom email chain (of 3-4 emails).
Summit is the most crowded event in Europe — this year it has brought
together 70,000 attendees, including clients, leaders, students and
hundreds of client engagement and .
The number alone sounds impressive. High expectations and excessive
advertising. But does Web Summit live up to its popularity? Let’s break
it down.
Reality: Web Summit indeed is the place to meet and network with people from all walks of life. Everyone seemed open-minded: You could start a
conversation with anyone and easily find company to go out for drinks during Night Summit.
Reality: No way. Too many students and young professionals. A great deal of attendees came to visit Portugal and Lisbon. On average, the level of
audience is extremely low. If we divide the crowd into layers, there
will be employees of the Giant companies such as IBM who had nothing new to tell, except for regurgitating their guidelines. Then come students
and aspiring professionals. The likelihood to meet a classic CTO or at
least a decision maker is around 3% to 5%. Like at any other conference, the attendees were busy collecting gifts and free water bottles.
Reality: Basically, advertising stands and concealed service companies that sell developers but try to pass for a startup. As soon as you dig deeper, it appears that the founders established their idea as Alpha, while in
reality, they operate as a service company. Nevertheless, there were a
lot of legitimate startups. Beta startups were also well-represented
providing the opportunity to learn a plenty of new things.
All in all, the pricing policy is far from being transparent and gender
neutral. It’s sad that such a noticeable event as Web Summit provides
unequal opportunities for men and women. I’m not sure what such policy
promotes but definitely not equal rights.
Reality: The event is just too big to offer a perfect service. That’s why the
service level can be best described as merely good.
Reality: There are exceptions for sure, but the statistics tells otherwise. If
we take service companies from Ukraine for example — Softserve brought
80 employees. Another service company ELEKS brought 20. Ask them about avarage .
A great deal of companies at the stands were service companies. Add an
influx of local companies and attendees from Eastern Europe. Western
companies were underrepresented. There were indeed a few professionals
who could attract potential clients, but Web Summit is a more of an
inspirational kind of event than a specialized conference.
A word of advice to the hosts: Do not schedule obviously sponsored talks in the first half of the day. No matter how much they are paying you. If I wanted to look at people in weird suits and slippers, I would watch a TV show.
What I wanted was to learn how to make the Internet available to all of
mankind and to listen to people who desire to change the world. To see
something different. Robot Sophia is nowadays a frequent visitor at any
event but not anymore an innovation or pièce de résistance.
Goodbye Web Summit — you have once been great!