How to: Set up your local User Group
Do you want to take the "buzz" of TechEd back home? Of course you do - you love Teched! Join a user group, or if there are no local user groups in your region - start your own.
Starting your own user group can be great fun, rewarding but also daunting, and many groups fail to continue after the first few months.
Join this interactive session to discuss some great tips on how to set up your own user group, and more importantly how to make it succeed and grow. Combining tips from many successful and experienced UG leaders, Andrew will cover the following areas:
Pick your topic/scope carefully
Giving it identity
Format, frequency, location, duration and consistency Speakers are key Funding - and promotion GITCA can help!
Getting beyond the first year
If you have always wanted to run Despite many private sector businesses now seeing a much improved economic outlook, many still consider the cuts in both manpower and budget restraints made during the last 2 years will remain tightly controlled throughout the next 12-18 months.
Through several discussions both with businesses and with other IT consultants, Andrew Bettany from the University of York draws the conclusion that businesses will continue to look for further cost reductions through some or all of the following:
efficiencies using technology to make a quicker ROI outsourcing where possible rather than employing skills automation of repetitive tasks rental rather than purchase of assets/software virtualisation to reduce expensive server acquisition recruiting only when necessary and seeking employees who can hit the decks running
Naturally training budgets as traditionally an easy area to be cut back. However during 2009/10 many early adopters and more agile companies are seeing tangible ROI from their prudent up skilling of key staff so that they realised some of the gains posed by the challenges listed above.
Training in the area of Virtualisation, Windows Server 2008 and Office 2007/2010 suites reap almost instant benefits and have bucked the trend of current training cutbacks.
This session explores the above outlined priorities and will facilitate an interactive discussion with attendees to establish the TechEd 2010 list of priorities and discuss them amongst our peers.