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So You’re Going to a 3D Printing Conference

TCT Show 2016

Tomorrow, September 22nd, is the autumnal equinox, officially beginning the season that we all know and love not only for pumpkin spice everything (everything) but also for an abundance of industry conferences, tradeshows, seminars, and other gatherings of like-minded individuals. In the 3D printing world, that means we’ll soon be hit not only with announcements of new hardware, software, materials, and partnerships, but the opportunity to see, hear, and learn about them first-hand in an upcoming onslaught of events. Meeting those behind the news in person is a massive benefit to these events, and networking/relationship-building is of course a mainstay.

In the next two weeks, I will be among the thousands expected to attend two highly-anticipated European events: TCT Show in Birmingham and IN(3D)USTRY in Barcelona. These two shows, with announcements already rolling in and eagerness setting in for attendees and exhibitors, are kicking off the busy 2017 fall conference season — are you ready for it?

So you’re going to a 3D printing conference

SOLIDWORKS World 2017

Great! You’re going to a show. Your registration is in, your bags are packed, your hotel is booked, and your ride share apps are up to date. That’s it, right, you’re good to go? Maybe not quite yet.

Attending a 3D printing conference requires careful preparation, whether going as a curious first-time visitor, intrigued student, experienced scientist, enthusiastic entrepreneur, expert speaker, intrepid journalist, grizzled industry veteran, or habitual lanyard-collector. The days will be long, the energy high, the coffee (and, later, wine) flowing, the voices loud, and the lights bright.

During the spring conference season, I personally averaged about 18-hour days, running from 6am to midnight; of course, those are journalist hours as the end of each day was dedicated to writing content to publish as real-time as possible from events and start on interviews while conversations were fresh. For non-journalists, hours may vary. Exhibitors are often first on-site and last to leave, working with setup, teardown, and full days settled in booths talking nonstop to visitors. Depending on reasons for attendance, visitors may be at a conference center for a few hours or for the duration of multi-day conferences. Whether measured in hours or days, going in with a plan is an important tactic.

As we get ready for the next series of shows, I’ve gathered some advice, drawn from my own experiences, that might help in attending conferences.

Before the conference

During the event

Just outside of the San Diego Convention Center as seen during Inside 3D Printing in December 2017

After you leave

Beyond Jabberwocky

Every so often in one of these events, it seems like the far-too-short-lived Better Off Ted got it right with flashy product announcements, as showcased in the brilliant presentation for Project Jabberwocky:

In looking back at presentations and announcements, question Jabberwocky. Think critically and analyze just how many “game-changing” announcements might change up any game at all. While 3D printing has been becoming a much more serious industry, there is still hype in innovation. You might see sequins, colored lighting, and even booth babes at an event; some great technology is housed behind kitschy appearance, while nothing-actually-happened announcements might have the sleekest-seeming presentations.

All that said, if you’re attending a conference, be prepared. Rest up and get ready for an energetic day/s of industry participants.

I look forward to these next events — if you’d like to talk in person at any of these, I’d love to connect via email or Twitter!

Do you have additional tips for shows? Let us know in the comments below or discuss this and other 3D printing topics at 3DPrintBoard.com!

[All photos: Sarah Goehrke]

 

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