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Aug 4

Written by: News Account
8/4/2009 5:20 PM

 

 

The Capitol Communicator’s "Connecting Communicators" event held July 30 at the offices of Arnold DC proved to be exactly that – a chance for area communicators to come together and connect with one another. (Check out our video on the Capitol Communicator home page.)

 

More than 300 people registered for the event and they spent the evening chatting with their peers in person and on-line.  You can check out the "Connecting Communicators" buzz at: capitolcom.r2ismash.com  and continue to participate by sending in your comments.

 

Among the many posts that we have seen about “Connecting Communicators”, we thought we would share two that reflected what we have heard from many others.

 

Debbie Friez posted an item about the event in which she said : My colleague Mike Robinson and I represented BurrellesLuce at the sold-out Capitol Communicator's inaugural event, Connecting Communicators, at Arnold DC on Thursday.  

"The event was truly “interactive” with video cameras and still cameras roaming the room. Live tweets and messages posting to the Capitol Communicator social mash-up page were projected on the walls for everyone to see. The smash-up made it possible for those unable to attend to also participate.

“My favorite moment of the evening was when I was networking with Nicole Nolte. She looked up at the screen and noticed one of my tweets, and asked my Twitter name. When I told her @dfriez, she said, “I knew I recognized you. I’m following you!” I asked her for her name, and it turns out I’m following her, too. In fact, we’ve re-tweeted each other many times. We even discovered that we know many of the same people.”

The second is from Woody Hinkle, Nasuti and Hickle, that we lifted from Woody’s “Juggling in the Dark.  Woody captured the essence of why we undertook the event in the following post which he titled "How to Pull a Community Together":

I grew up in Springfield, Virginia.

Springfield is not really a town or a city or anything. It's more of a mailing address than anything else. But when I was a boy, it was definitely a community. There was a real sense of place to it. One reason, I think, was that there was a community newspaper, The Springfield Independent. Three couples started it as a non-profit back in 1958 or something and when it grew beyond their capacity, they sold it to my parents. So I grew up with a front-row seat to the value of a community newspaper as a bonding sorta thing.

Which is a very long way to get into applauding the Capitol Communicator and Paul Duning. The Washington creative community is kind of disjointed. Ad folks over here, design studios over there, web people and PR people somewhere else. Geographically, it's a challenge. It's not like New York where everybody is a walk or subway ride from everybody else.

So developing a sense of community is hard. Which is unfortunate, I think, because I feel like that sense of community can be the vehicle toward this being a better advertising town. The Ad Club has been trying lately, with events like their upcoming Comedy Night, but so much of what the Ad Club does seems designed as much to make money as anything else. Advertising Week is interesting and lots of people go, and by many yardsticks, it's a success.

But I think there is a need for events that are more accessible. I'm in a real minority here, but I think that the more the various players at various agencies and studios in the area can feel like they are part of something, the better off we'll all be. There is no bar where all the creative folks show up on Thursdays to BS and have a few drinks. The Business Journal, Washington Times and Washington Post have all at various times had and then dropped advertising columns.

Which brings me to the Capitol Communicator. Paul has actually managed to put together a great web site that is a place where anybody can go and find out what is new and going on in your own or similar business areas. It's the closest thing Washington has to something like the Denver Egoist, which regular readers know I think is a fabulous thing for the Denver community.

Last week The Capitol Communicator put on an event called "Connecting Communicators" for no reason except to, well, connect communicators.

Generally, I'm not a cocktail-party kinda guy. I'm not good at striking up conversations with people I don't know, and I refuse to wear a name badge. Karen is good at that stuff, so I usually follow her around and just listen in while sipping a drink and sampling snacks as they pass by.

But I actually went to Connecting Communicators (to the absolute shock of my friend Rebecca Chanin) and I had a good time. It was -- or did not appear to be -- a business-networking event or anything at all but a party to see some friends and make some new ones. Or in my case, realize how many people in the communicatons community in DC you do not know.

So anyway, thanks to Paul Duning and the Capitol Communicator.

A community needs something to pull it together.

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1 comments so far...

Re: How to Pull a Community Together

Great job Paul. Sorry I couldn't make it. Let's have a monthly get together. How about if we get the Roof top at the Rockville Town Center on a Thursday or Friday night. It's open to all and right on the Rockville Metro line. Give me a buzz. 202-276-3263. tfahey@dirigoagency.com

By Tim Fahey on   8/6/2009 12:31 PM

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