Since 2006, SEOmoz has offered a summer training event in Seattle, WA. This year, our 6th, that event is becoming something truly unique - the search marketing industry's first customer conference.
Mozcon tickets are now on sale (though quite a few have already sold to those on the waiting list) for July 27-29 - if you're in the organic web marketing field, you should pull every string possible to attend. I promise something truly exceptional on every front - content, speakers, facilities, networking, parties, food/accommodations and attention to detail in every aspect of the show.
The Top 10 Reasons you Have to Come to MozCon:
#1: Incredible Speakers
Here's a list of the folks currently on the agenda over the 3 days of MozCon:
- Adam Audette, CEO, Audette Media
- Alex Schultz, Director of Growth, Facebook
- Avinash Kaushik, Analytics Evangelist at Google + Co-Founder of Market Motive
- Bill Leake, CEO, Apogee Results
- Bob Rains, Partner, Tandler Doerje
- Bryan Zmijewski, Founder + CEO, Zurb
- David Mihm, Cofounder, GetListed
- Eytan Seidman, Cofounder, Oyster Hotels
- Hannah Smith, Search Marketing Consultant, Distilled
- Ian Lurie, CEO, Portent Interactive
- Jamie Steven, VP Marketing, SEOmoz
- Jen Lopez, Community Manager, SEOmoz
- Joanna Lord, Director of Acquisition, SEOmoz
- Kate Morris, Search Marketing Consultant, Distilled
- Martin MacDonald, Head of SEO, Omnicom Media Group
- Matthew Brown, Cofounder, AudienceWise
- Melanie Mitchell, SVP Search Marketing, Digitas
- Merry Morud, Online Marketing Manager, Aimclear
- Rand Fishkin, CEO, SEOmoz
- Richard Baxter, CEO, SEOGadget
- Stefan Weitz, Director, Bing Search
- Stephen Pavlovich, CEO, Conversion Factory
- Tony Wright, Founder, Startup Front End
- Wil Reynolds, CEO, SEER Interactive
- Will Critchlow, Cofounder, Distilled
These aren't just some of the industry's best and brightest, but some of the best speakers in the web marketing field around the world. I've personally seen everyone above give a presentation (usually many), and I can promise the quality of their presentations will be exceptional.
#2: Actionable, Expert-Level Content
Here's a portion of the email I recently sent to every speaker for MozCon:
...Every speaking spot at MozCon is a "keynote"-like format. We recruit only the best of the best that we've seen deliver exceptional quality presentations in the past - that's YOU!...
...The audience is tough. Really, really tough. They have high demands, high expectations and in the past 5 years, despite our best efforts, we've never had 100% satisfaction on three factors - level of content (they want more advanced), freshness of material (they want tips/info they've never heard before) and actionability of recommendations (they want takeaways they can use tomorrow).
This year, we're going to push even harder. With every slide you craft and every topic you bring up, please ask yourself, "is this this material likely to be new to this audience, useful, actionable and expert-level?" Content that doesn't fit those four criteria should be excluded. Case studies, specific examples, results of experiments, research data, rarely mentioned tools/resources and detailed processes are great. Broad discussions of a topic (e.g. "you need to engage with your customers!") or broad recommendations (e.g. "track what your visitors do on your site!"), slides with nothing but bullet points+text and stuff we've all heard before... not so much. :-)
The content quality and takeaways from MozCon will be the most useful, valuable, advanced material you receive from any event this year (yes, really). I attend and speak at dozens of events in the marketing world, and every year, we've been able to make the level of MozCon stand out from the crowd. This year, our aim is to exceed that expectation even more dramatically.
#3: Return on Investment
Until May 6th (this Friday), Mozcon is just $799 for SEOmoz PRO members. If you add a roundtrip flight from most US cities and hotel for 3 nights (we are working on a special deal with the Seattle Westin, where the event is hosted, that should be available soon), your total outlay will be ~$2,000, the price of many major marketing conference tickets alone.
Given the actionable advice and remarkable networking opportunities, this event will "pay for itself" by the end of the first day. Nowhere else can you find the level of speakers, content, amenities and
Being fully transparent, the reason why is simple: SEOmoz does not optimize to make a profit on this conference. We, instead, are focused on providing the most exceptional experience possible, through content, speakers, venue and after-hours events (and merely covering costs with ticket sales). Our software business is where our investors/shareholders expect revenue growth. This event is purely to give back to our customers and show our appreciation to our community - you!
#4: Location
Seattle is a drizzly, cloudy town for 9 months out of the year. But in July... It's magic:
The sun stays out until nearly 10pm, the temperature is in the upper 70s - low 80s. Outdoor cafes, rooftop barbecues, sidewalk stands and lots of pale skin all come out to enjoy the few days a year that make living in the Northwest all worthwhile. As many visitors often remark, "Seattle has the best summer in the country."
Many thanks to Rudy Lopez for the amazing photos.
#5: After-Hours Events
SEOmoz has long been known for throwing great parties, but in 2011, we're planning to top them all. Of course, we'll have our traditional night of drinks, food, bowling, pool and networking at the Garage (a summer tradition for Mozzers since 2007).
This year's Garage party will take place Thursday night, July 28th
But, this year, we're also planning some very unique events on the nights of Wednesday the 27th and Friday the 29th, too. Bring your cameras :-)
#6: Meet & Give Feedback to the Moz Product/Engineering Teams
For the first time this year, there'll be a table (perhaps a group of tables) in the halls outside the MozCon auditorium with members of our product + engineering teams actively working on new products, features and software.
Stop in, say hi, and give them your feedback on what you want to see, what annoys you, what you love and what direction you'd like to see us take. Our team can't wait to hear from you (and they might even have a gift to share if you do swing by).
#7: No Sponsors, No Sales Pitches, No Advertising
Unlike other events, MozCon has no paid advertisers, no vendor booths, no salespeople and no sponsored sessions, lanyards, bags, or cocktail parties. Every session is all about the content, and off-stage, our obligation is making sure you're getting the most from your MozCon experience, not trying to push additional products, services or companies.
You'll even see plenty of speakers talking about and recommending SEOmoz software competitors like Raven + Majestic. We do not push our speakers to sell any products, including our own, so what you'll hear and see is absolutely authentic. It's part of our core values.
#8: No Panels; Every Session is Keynote-Quality
I personally don't like the panel format, and I know from many conversations around the world that others agree. While they have great benefits - giving new speakers a less pressure-filled spot to start earning their stripes (something I certainly did!), enabling multiple points of view on a single topic, creating more speaking slots - they also have significant drawbacks. Panels frequently mean that it's impossible for a speaker to "go deep" on their subject, it almost always means several subpar speakers in the group and, IMO, it detracts from the value some of the great speakers on panels could potentially deliver if given the right format.
We don't accept pitches from speakers, and we only invite those folks who we've already seen deliver amazing talks. We pick up flights, hotels + meals for all of our speakers and give them 30-60 minutes of unadultered time in front of our entire audience. This builds a phenomenal incentive for each to bring their A-game while presenting on an advanced topic in an ideal format.
We don't have a formal "keynote," but we do have many, many speakers who regularly keynote other shows. They won't speak in broad generalizations or give 10 minute overviews; their job is giving tips, examples and case studies you can use. And, we use the rating feedback data from our attendees every year and invite back only the top few speakers in subsequent years. You're going to see great stuff - we promise.
#9: Fantastic Meals, Seating + Amenities
Every seat at MozCon has power, wifi, a desk, water bottles and, this year, something extra-special (an idea we stole from Distilled's conference series that we love).
We splurge on meals, coffee breaks, ice cream socials, full breakfasts and lunches, drinks and amenities. Your MozCon experience will be the most comfortable and smile-inducing experience you'll have at a professional event this year, even outside the sessions.
#10: We Have a Huge, Surprise Unveiling on Day 1
MozCon attendees will be the first to see something amazing we're releasing July 27th and will get early access to... this... amazing thing (sorry, the transparent part of me is dying to tell you what it is, but I promised it would stay secret until MozCon). Trust me when I say you won't want to miss it!
And don't ask Jen about it on Twitter, because she's not telling! :-)
As of today, approximately 400 seats are available. In the prior 5 years, we've sold out ahead of the event EVERY YEAR. I'd highly recommend getting tickets early:
If you absolutely can't make it to MozCon, come anyway. Barring that, you should come see us at:
- The Free SEOmoz Meetup in New York City, May 12th
- Distilled's Boston Conference, May 15th + 16th
- SMX Paris, June 6th + 7th
- SMX Advanced Seattle, June 7th + 8th
Event photos in this post are from our August, 2010 PRO Training event in Seattle.
Are you considering a European MOZcon tour, for us overseas?
I would vote for that!
Even though different, I think that the Distilled ProSEO in London next end of October is somehow to consider an European MozCon, due to the strong relations existing between SEOmoz and Distilled.
Thanks for pointing that out! I'll keep an eye on that event.
Nonetheless it would be great to meet the SEOmoz staff, as my SEO existence almost depends on SEOmoz' tools, community and knowledge sharing :)
That would be a great idea! As much fun as drizzly Seattle could be, I need something closer to home!
Already signed up for the MozCon...
this Italian is coming Seattle :D
Gianluca is in? So am I!
Suggestion to anyone waiting for your boss to pay, invest in yourself! I've never had a company pay for any conference attendance. It's on-going education. You'll get some of the best, most focused content at SEOmoz training!
Shall we call it SEOmoz.edu? :-)
We could share the duty of relating the "MozCon Chronicles" ;)
I may help "chronicle" the training. Last year I missed some networking (and sleep) writing posts but learned sooo much. This year I'll be absorbing the people but will surely be anxious to write.
SO look forward to meeting you in person, finally!
Woot!... Steve and I will see you there!
Thomas, looking forward to seeing you AND Steve!
That's great news - looking forward to finally meeting in person!
Seriously awesome to be involved! I'm really happy to take some feedback / input on the agenda for advanced keyword research - leave your requests in the comments people and I'll make sure it gets covered off!
Pivot tables!!!
Richard, so look forward to seeing you again!
Oh yeah - I can do that :-)
July 28th is my birthday. Will there be cake? ;)
What about 400+ geeks singing "Happy Birthday to youuu" (+ a cake... at least one of those sweet cupcakes we always see in the MozPlex photos on Facebook).
It'd probably be tougher to go into the MozPlex and NOT get cake :)
Yea seriously. What are you thinking? :)
Oh, boy, we get to sing you Happy Birthday as a group. How optimized will that be?
Best with the event, Rand. Two notes from me on your post, because it makes some generalities about conferences, and I want to make sure things are clear from the SMX side.
No one pays to speak on our editorial panels. We have some sponsored sessions. These are always clearly marked. They are in addition to an overwhelming amount of editorial content. We don't think having them somehow makes the SMX experience somehow "less" for attendees.
Indeed, attendees sometimes want to connect with companies -- when SEOmoz has exhibited, your booth along with others is an attraction. So having an expo is part of our experience, a valuable role that our event fills. Our obligation to our attendees is giving them the very best experience possible. That's why we're still the only conference to offer a guarantee.
In terms of panels, we have them. Some might be small, two people. A few might be three people. Occasionally we go to four. For a pure Q&A session, we might go more. We also have solo speakers. It depends on the topic and what the session coordinator ultimately thinks makes sense.
Panels aren't bad. They don't always mean subpar speakers. The don't always have signficant drawbacks. The absolutely do not, as you write, mean people will "speak in broad generalizations or give 10 minute overviews; their job is giving tips, examples and case studies you can use."
It's how a session is organized and prepared that depends on if it will do well or not. A solo speaker, who works on affiliate web sites, isn't better because get 30 minutes to talk if they're speaking to an audience with in house people. And pick your topic, just going from 10 minutes to 30 minutes doesn't necessarily mean you've gone "deep" enough.
People can communicate amazing and complicated things in short periods of time. Anyone who doubts this can go watch some Ignite talks (5 mins max) or TED talks (3-18 minutes).
I've spoken at Ignite many times. I've never brought less than my "A Game" even though I've had only 5 minutes to speak. And trying to communcate in only 5 minutes makes for an incredibly tight, difficult to prepare presentation. You really think about what needs to be said, rather than perhaps going on longer than you need to.
I'm not trying to rain on the MozCon parade. I think the event sounds great, and I enjoyed the time I spoke to Mozzers at it several years ago. I understand why you want to have a format of no panels and what you think fits for your particular event.
But the generalities that you make all imply that everyone else is doing it wrong, or doing something inferior. Rather than it having to be a panels are bad, single speakers are better thing, I'd rather it be what's actually the case. Formats don't make a great session. Having qualified and prepared speakers do.
Danny brings up some good points, and as a reader, I didn't infer any generalities or that others were doing it wrong. However, I can understand these points in hindsight.
Interestingly, I've always thought of SEOmoz as intense training, more classroom approach, and not a conference. Is this the first year it's called a conference? hmmm...
This is a good opportunity to thank Danny for putting on one of THE best conference circuits with SMX. Danny, you have always had top-notch speakers and content. I've taken home insights after every event that were actionable. Look forward to SMX Advanced and seeing you in Seattle in June!
Damn, not sure I will be able to swing this one by the pregnant wife, but next year, for sure. :)
As a huge geeky fan of the frasier tv show there is a double whammy reason for me to get out of the UK and over to the MozCon.
Have a good one folks!
Like previous SEOmoz Training events, will this be video recorded and available for purchase?
Wont be able to make it to this event this year.
Looking forward to this event!
I've let my Pro Membership lapse. Are there any promotions for Pro Membership/Mozcon combination packages available? I'll stay subscribed to this blog entry with hopes of a response to this. Also, the sales staff can certainly call or email if they wish.
Warmly,
~ Joe :)
warenews at gmail.com
509.308.5513
Hi Joe,
There are no specific packages avaialbe but you can resignup for PRO again and then register for MozCon at the PRO price. Â Feel free to email me at casey [at] seomoz.org if you have any questions.
Casey
I really want to go! That would be awesome!
How many costume changes will rand have! He's like the modern day prince of the SEO world!
Just registered and absolutely pumped to be coming to MozCon. It'll be a long trip (Melbourne, Australia) - think I spend as much time on planes as I will at the conference - but judging on past videos and the impressive speaker lineup it will be well worth it.
Looking forward to meeting a bunch of like-minded SEO folks - be sure to say "G'day".
Steve
Looking forward to the conference! Â See you there :)
Great, I've added the event to our Dutch website https://onlinemarketingevents.nl/mozcon-seattle-27-28-29-07-2011/ to get more Dutch SEO's and online marketing guys at your event!
I signed up, but can't find the itinerary anywhere?
Hi! We'll have the final agenda soon. Watch the blog for the details in the next week or so.Â
Thanks!
@tpittman - not sure if you still need the itinerary... I found one here:
https://mozcon2011.eventbrite.com/
I'm looking forward to it!
Compaier india seo packages it's very high package, and also traviling .Â
Since I was oficially the 1st person to register for MozCon, can I get a seat right in the front middle?
Francisco Meza
I'll see you there!
Looks like I better reschedule a couple things.Â
Oh Man Look at the list of speakers, i Love to attend but i am unable to join this MOZcon, this is not fair Rand :(
What an incredible line up. You could select a random five of these speakers and they would make it worth going. Too bad I am on summer vacation these days.
Pssst... MozCon is part of my summer vacation...
I'm pretty stoked about this, too!
Well, I must say, thats a great set of people to listen to. I think the bad is: its in US. People like me and a few others who are overseas can just read transcripts...@ Rand: Gillian was in India, ask her if you guys can arrange something similar in India.
Yes Come to india. I m sure we can arrange stuffs in india... Many compnies ll love to learn from you.
So, it Request to come to india.
Really wish for two things:
Alas, it looks amazing, some of the top speakers are in that list so the event should be amazing. I'll be following it live on twitter most likely!
Hi.Â
I´d love to go but I live in Argentina and air tickets from here are veeery expensive
May I have an extra discount in your ticket price? So then I can afford it.
Regards
Gustavo
did you guys stop linking back to seomoz home page with the anchor text seomoz for a particular reason? :) is that anchor text dilluting your desired theme?
This sounds like an exciting event. Â I am debating on whether I should attend or not. Â If you have gone to this event before, can you give me some insight? Â I have been to plenty of conferences that turned out to be nothing short of a hoo-ra party. Â I don't want to get all hyped up about how great SEO is. Â I want to actually know that I will learn insight information and be educated more about SEO.
If you have attended in years past, can you share you experience with me? Â Thank you so much!Â
I have been to the last two seminars, and I've found them extremely valuable. While the speakers have been very good to excellent in my experience, I think the time socializing is nearly as valuable. I've learned a lot during the meals and breaks, chatting with others about Internet marketing.
one more said moment for me as i can not be there... :( but i am really wanted to attend few speakers like Stefan Weitz, Richard Baxter and Jennifer Lopez of SEOmoz..
This looks like a great confrence, but too far from Australia =(
Deffiantly want to see Will Reynolds speak.Â
/sigh :(
One day I will live in America and I'll be able to come along... until then, make sure there's more DVD's for us who can't get there yeah? :D
#11. The chance to network with a few hundred of the world's most dedicated SEO fanatics?