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SXSW: An A Priori Gold Rush?

By | March 7, 2010, 10:37pm PST

Summary: South by South West, the music and arts festival which also has an ‘interactive’ component starts next weekend, and I’m already getting irritated with it again. According to this year’s website South by Southwest (SXSW, Inc.) is a private company based in Austin, Texas, with a year-round staff of professionals dedicated to building and delivering conference and [...]

South by South West, the music and arts festival which also has an ‘interactive’ component starts next weekend, and I’m already getting irritated with it again.

According to this year’s website

South by Southwest (SXSW, Inc.) is a private company based in Austin, Texas, with a year-round staff of professionals dedicated to building and delivering conference and festival events for entertainment and related media industry professionals. Since 1987, SXSW has produced the internationally recognized Music and Media Conference & Festival.

In 1994 as the entertainment business adjusted to issues of future growth and development, SXSW added conferences and festivals for the film industry (SXSW Film) as well as for the blossoming interactive media (SXSW Interactive Festival). Now three industry events converge in Austin during a Texas-sized week, mirroring the ever increasing convergence of entertainment/media outlets.

The music event has grown from 700 registrants in 1987 to nearly 12,000 registrants. SXSW Film and SXSW Interactive events attract approximately 11,000 registrants to Austin every March according to Wikipedia.

For the music industry this is an important event, with musicians networking and showcasing their creativity for label representation and people familiar with the business of exposing talent and finding retail channels for their live and recorded music. A similar scenario plays out  around the art and business of the rapidly evolving world of independent film.

The interactive part of the event showcases ‘the best new websites, video games and startup ideas the community has to offer‘, and the whole event runs under the proposition ‘Tomorrow Happens Here‘.

I’ve never been to SXSW so perhaps I’m being unduly harsh, but from my perspective the attempted confluence of the selling of creative arts with the online marketing profession doesn’t help either group.

This quote in the promo blurb encapsulates the problem for me:

If you haven’t yet attended SXSW, you need to. Plan for it now. Do whatever you have to to convince your higher ups it’s worthwhile. Everything is changing. Advertising is dying. Come to SXSW® and see where things are going next.” Adrants, March 20, 2009

For some reason 2010 seems to be the year of the crystal ball gazer: tomorrow is a much buzzier, more exciting place to be than the more mundane tasks of this Monday morning, with deadlines and commitments.

Where this gets really tricky is around the enterprise software world, which isn’t likely to spawn many ‘Rock Stars’ in the near future despite the embarrassing usage of that term by the business press to describe successful people.

The huge challenge we face when we are exposed to over confident proclamations about how the world is changing and where it’s going is the timeless philosophical problem around the difference between a priori and a posteriori knowledge and experience.

Wikipedia: The terms a priori (”prior to”) and a posteriori (”subsequent to”) are used in philosophy to distinguish two types of knowledge, justifications or arguments.
A priori knowledge or justification is independent of experience (for example ‘All bachelors are unmarried’); a posteriori knowledge or justification is dependent on experience or empirical evidence (for example ‘Some bachelors are very happy’).
A priori justification makes reference to experience; but the issue concerns how one knows the proposition or claim in question—what justifies or grounds one’s belief in it.

For music and film creativity, an a priori vision into human emotions and ground breaking thinking is essential to explore new creative ground, and once those new ideas are successfully sold and consumed by a mass audience they are typically recycled as advertising and marketing.

Both creative and business types in the creative professions travel to Texas for SXSW hoping to strike gold, much like the Canadian Klondike gold rush (which ultimately spawned the sheet music ‘Klondike March‘ above - a musical hit at the turn of the 20th century).

Social media and digital marketing mavens regularly include business collaboration technologies into their a priori knowledge (’independent of any experience…’) of how they think businesses work, and this can be enormously confusing and counter productive for people attempting to get their arms around modern technologies.

The amount of noise that comes out of SXSW every year on this topic both during and after is disturbing, particularly when mile wide, inch deep ideas gain credibility and get rolled up into fashionable, of the moment and futuristic thinking by social media personalities. (To be fair some good thinking usually comes out of the event also).

Busy business people looking for solutions to problems online can sometimes fall for simplistic frameworks and thinking which has never been anywhere near practical use, measurement or results. The tech world is plagued by media industry folks who know what the future holds (”Advertising is dying. Come to SXSW® and see where things are going next….”).

You know there’s a problem when futurist Twitter hustlers congregate on Austin to impress each other with karaoke renditions of past musical hits at an event that was originally all about sorting through a sea of musical hopefuls to find genuine musical creativity and business value.

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Oliver Marks provides seasoned independent consulting guidance through the Sovos Group to companies on the effective planning of 'Enterprise 2.0' strategy, tactics, technology decisions and roll out.

Disclosure

Oliver Marks

Oliver Marks professional work is defined by an objective viewpoint of the broad spectrum of vendors and options available to his clients and readers of this blog. Oliver provides an impartial perspective of vendors and is focused on contractual affiliation with clients in order to select appropriate solutions. As such he has no business relationships with the companies or services he recommends. Oliver is a founding partner of The Sovos Group. The opinions, concepts and views put forward in this blog are solely those of Oliver Marks.

Biography

Oliver Marks

Oliver Marks is a founding partner at SovosGroup.com which provides seasoned independent consulting guidance to companies on the effective planning of 'Enterprise 2.0' strategy, tactics, technology decisions and roll out.

With extensive senior management practical experience in international enterprise collaboration, Oliver previously managed the Sony PlayStation 'WorldWide Studios' collaboration extranet, and has worked with the American Management Association, Sun, Docent/SumTotal Systems, Harvard Business School and McKinsey & Company on major initiatives around knowledge transfer and change management.

Oliver has dual US/UK citizenship and has worked on Asian, European and American global enterprise collaboration, and spoken at various conferences. He is based in San Francisco.

His personal blog is at www.olivermarks.com.
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RE: SXSW: An A Priori Gold Rush?
Damon Webster Updated - 10th Mar 2010
SXSW is an excellent festival for tech and marketing to converge. The best minds in both arenas should attend as the share will be profitable for all. In one cool location, the seminars are about stuff you can implement now, and glimpses into the future.
It's about the people that are actually doing the work, instead high end execs hearing about only big picture concepts.
Very valuable info, as this train keeps increasing it's speed.
see you there
Damon Webster
0 Votes
+ -
RE: SXSW: An A Priori Gold Rush?
davidheller 8th Mar 2010
So you are knocking SXSW in part because it consists of
people with no business experience addressing business
concerns. A little ironic coming from a writer with no SXSW
experience.
0 Votes
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Contributr
RE: SXSW: An A Priori Gold Rush?
@OliverMarks 8th Mar 2010
SXSW is everywhere in San Francisco and online this week, and the hyperbole is building. you don't need to physically attend to see the impact and effect it has on various business sectors....
0 Votes
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the author sounds bitter and lacking in perspective
0 Votes
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RE: SXSW: An A Priori Gold Rush?
largemac1955 8th Mar 2010
Oliver,
You sound as if you could use a little fun. Pop the company credit card in the pocket, take a jaunt to Austin. Show the Twitter fools the error of their ways (and I agree that is a task worth doing) and then get down and have some fun--Austin Texas style. If you can't get your attitude adjusted at that locale, then it probably can't be done. Just because they want to play social networking doesn't mean that the musical end of things isn't one of the year's best gatherings.
Now, Git! and say hello to the cowgirls and the rest of 'em for me.
0 Votes
+ -
RE: SXSW: An A Priori Gold Rush?
Damon Webster Updated - 10th Mar 2010
SXSW is an excellent festival for tech and marketing to converge. The best minds in both arenas should attend as the share will be profitable for all. In one cool location, the seminars are about stuff you can implement now, and glimpses into the future.
It's about the people that are actually doing the work, instead high end execs hearing about only big picture concepts.
Very valuable info, as this train keeps increasing it's speed.
see you there
Damon Webster

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