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September 23, 2009 5:35 PM PDT

DemoFall ends with awards and emotional good-byes

by Daniel Terdiman
  • 1 comment

For years, outgoing Demo managing director Chris Shipley has had an on-stage dance. On Wednesday, in celebration of her handing off the reins of the event to VentureBeat founder Matt Marshall, Shipley led Demo owner IDG founder and CEO Pat McGovern in a version of the jig.

(Credit: Daniel Terdiman/CNET)

SAN DIEGO--The Demo community--an august group of entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, and technology reporters--gave a fond farewell Wednesday afternoon here to longtime Demo managing director Chris Shipley.

As is well known, Shipley is leaving the helm of Demo, having now officially handed off the reins to VentureBeat founder Matt Marshall.

But as just about the last official act of DemoFall 09, Pat McGovern, the founder and chairman of IDG, which owns the Demo conferences, led the audience in a standing ovation for Shipley.

The DemoFall 09 crowd gave Shipley a standing ovation for her 13 years of work.

(Credit: Daniel Terdiman/CNET)

Prior to that sentimental moment, meanwhile, seven Demo God winners were announced, as well as the two winners of IDG's media prize.

The seven Demo God winners were:

Emo Labs, for its Edge Motion speaker technology
• Intelius, for its DateCheck service
• Zorap
• Hevva, for its Local Dirt service
• Twirl TV
Pinyadda
• ShareGrove

The last two companies were selected from among the 14 "AlphaPitch" presenters, which had just 90 seconds to make their case, rather than the six minutes given to each of the nearly 60 regular Demo companies.

IDG also awarded its two media prizes, one to a consumer product, and the other to an enterprise play. Each winner will receive up to $500,000 worth of free advertising across IDG properties.

Incoming Demo managing director Matt Marshall (left) and Shipley congratulate the founders of Demo God and IDG media prize winner Emo Labs.

(Credit: Daniel Terdiman/CNET)

The consumer winner was Emo Labs, whose Edge Motion technology may well change the way the public experiences speakers. The enterprise winner was Liaise, whose software is meant to help companies with "the capture and management of KeyPoints--tasks, issues, dates, and priorities--buried inside e-mails, IMs, and other communications."

As is generally the case, the acceptance speeches were a bit teary-eyed, especially by Demo God and media prize winner Emo Labs' CEO Jason Carlson, who noted that his company had only come to Demo after being convinced by Shipley that he and his team could put together a coherent six-minute presentation.

Earlier, Shipley gave out a series of Lifetime Achievement awards to tech luminaries like Palm co-founder Donna Dubinsky, Diane Greene, a co-founder of VMware, Better Place founder and CEO Shai Agassi, and (in absentia) Marc Benioff.

In his own defiant and emotional moment, Barry James Folsom, CEO of Demo God winner Twirl TV urged the entrepreneurs in the room to carry on, despite any roadblocks they might encounter along their path to success. "If you do not have an obstacle, or someone telling you it's not a good idea, or someone telling you it will never work, and you believe them, you're not an entrepreneur," Folsom said. "(The) Lifetime Achievement award winners...They did it in spite of everyone telling them they couldn't."

February 27, 2009 10:05 AM PST

Arrington: I'll go to Demo 'if we're invited'

by Daniel Terdiman
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TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington said he will attend DemoFall, a year after the 2008 edition of his own TechCrunch 50 event was scheduled head-to-head with that year's DemoFall.

(Credit: Dan Farber/CNET Networks)

It looks like Michael Arrington has changed his mind about the value of the Demo conference in the wake of the announcement that VentureBeat CEO and editor-in-chief Matt Marshall will be taking over the tech conference after this year.

And, more notably, he's indicated that his tech conference, TechCrunch 50, won't be held at the same time as DemoFall this year, as it famously was in 2008.

"I'll certainly go to (DemoFall)," Arrington said Thursday. "I think we're on different weeks this year."

DemoFall 09 is scheduled for September 21-23 in San Diego. The 2009 edition of TechCrunch 50 does not have publicly announced dates yet.

Last year, Arrington and co-TechCrunch 50 organizer Jason Calacanis caused a stir in the technology industry when they announced that their conference would be held at the same time as DemoFall.

And he stirred the controversy by telling CNET News that because of what he saw as Demo's outdated "pay-to-play" model, in which companies must pay five figures to exhibit, that "Demo needs to die."

Now, as Marshall prepares to share the stage with outgoing Demo director Chris Shipley at Demo '09 next week, it appears that Arrington has softened his stance.

"If we're invited" to DemoFall, he said, "we'll go."

Originally posted at Digital Media
September 5, 2008 12:01 PM PDT

Are Demo and TechCrunch50 fragmenting their audiences?

by Daniel Terdiman
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Michael Arrington's TechCrunch50 event, which will put the spotlight on 50 start-up companies, begins on Monday, just as DemoFall, which features 72 high-tech companies and their products, gets going.

(Credit: Dan Farber/CNET Networks)

Update, 12:36 p.m. PDT: Business Week now says it is planning to send a reporter from its print side to DemoFall to complement the online reporter it is sending to the TechCrunch50.

If you're a fan of high-tech product announcements, next week could well be heaven for you.

That's because starting Monday, both DemoFall and TechCrunch50 begin, each of which showcases dozens of brand-new products. And on Tuesday, Apple has scheduled one of its semi-regular press gatherings at which CEO Steve Jobs is sure to unveil some hot new iPod, Mac, or iPhone models--or some combination thereof.

Between the three events--Demo in San Diego, and TechCrunch50 (TC50) and Apple's PR event in San Francisco--most of the high-tech press, analysts, and venture capitalists will be busy writing up dozens of stories on the announcements, analyzing them, or (for some) trying to decide if there's anything worth investing in.

So as a reader or industry observer, it doesn't get much better than that.

But if you're one of the 122 companies that are scheduled to be featured at Demo and TC50 (plus the several dozen more at TC50 that will be secondary presenters), you would be within your rights to be a little bit disappointed that the potential audience for your presentation will necessarily be fragmented. After all, before this year, Demo and TechCrunch50 were scheduled for different weeks and therefore didn't present the press, analysts, and VCs with a difficult decision about which event to attend. And that meant that as a presenting company, you had the undivided attention of those three key constituencies.

But not this year.

In April, TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington and Mahalo founder Jason Calacanis, the two main partners involved in putting on TC50, announced the dates for their event. It turned out they coincided exactly with DemoFall, which had scheduled its dates long before.

Arrington and Calacanis argued vociferously that their event was actually on the same dates as it had been the year before, while DemoFall had moved several weeks on the calendar. And they said that their chosen venue in San Francisco had not had any other available dates that fit their needs.

Of price and previews
At the same time, Arrington took the opportunity to inject his unique brand of enthusiasm for an issue, in this case a major distaste for Demo, by laying into that event. "Demo needs to die," he told me in no uncertain terms.

"It's just an old-school model," Arrington elaborated at the time. "It clearly involves pay-to-play, and what we're offering is better."

By pay-to-play, he was referring to the fact that Demo is charging the 72 companies that will present in San Diego a five-figure fee for the opportunity to do so. TC50, by comparison, is charging nothing for the 50 companies that it will showcase.

Both charge hefty fees of at least $2,500 for most attendees.

In an interview Thursday, Arrington reiterated that he feels that Demo's business model is a "payola scheme that is fundamentally dishonest."

"I want them to change their business model," Arrington said, insisting that he wants what's best for the technology companies that present at the two events.

TC50 is built around highlighting 50 start-up companies and their products, while Demo's presenters can be start-ups or established outfits. But both events require that the products on display be brand new, with no previous public exposure. Demo gives press advance access to a list of the presenting companies and their products (in order to allow for stories to be ready to run when the event begins Monday), while Arrington has been adamant that no advance information on TC50's companies will be available to anyone.

To many, the decision to place TC50 head-to-head with DemoFall was a classic challenge from Arrington and a way to draw a tremendous amount of attention to his event.

The gambit succeeded in that regard, with dozens of stories about the conflict at the time and since.

And in the months that followed, Arrington has hardly been silent on the matter. Most recently, he got up in arms about a barely noticed charge of plagiarism against Calacanis by a former Demo organizer, which was quickly disavowed by current Demo director Chris Shipley.

So what's someone who would like to be at both events to do?

Who's covering what?
CNET News is among the few news organizations that has the personnel to be at both events, and we will be covering the two--plus Apple's announcement--thoroughly. But many media outlets don't have the resources for that, and will have to choose. And the same is true of individuals for whom being in both cities over the course of the two days will be tricky.

The reasons for the choices those outfits make are varied, of course.

BusinessWeek.com is covering only TC50 because Demo's winter event, which is held in January or February each year, gets the site's attention then, according to Tom Giles, editor of the site's technology and science channel.

"We've got limited resources, obviously, and we have to deploy them as strategically as we can," Giles said. "We just haven't (ever) really put a lot of emphasis on Demo in the fall. (But) the fact that BusinessWeek.com isn't sending somebody there this year is unrelated to the timing of TechCrunch50."

For his part, Arrington acknowledged that some companies presenting at TC50 might end up with less press coverage, and therefore feel some "pain," than they might if some news organizations weren't sending reporters solely to Demo. But he added that he thinks "almost all the press is going to be at TC50."

One news organization that will be at both is Wired.com, according to news editor Leander Kahney.

We've "got to cover both," Kahney said. "TechCrunch is the new kid on the block, (with) lots of buzz. But Demo still pulls interesting companies."

For venture capitalists, perhaps the audience that the presenting companies at both events most want to impress, the timing conflict is a chance to decide if one or both gatherings are really worth the hype. But because of the high-profile nature of the conflict, many VCs are loathe to have their names associated with the kerfuffle.

"Demo has been around for a long time, (and) it's respected, but there's a feeling that it's rested on its laurels a bit, that it's lost its luster," said one Silicon Valley VC, who is going to try to attend both Demo and TC50. "TechCrunch is seen as the up and comer and that they want to take out the incumbent. It's unfortunate because Demo has tried to stay above the fray. No one wants to take sides. It's kind of silly. The party that loses are the start-ups."

Shipley agreed.

"I think it fractures the audience" for both events," the Demo director said. "We have a remarkable media list (of) nearly 100 media (representatives) coming to our event to cover these events. But lots of organizations have had to make a choice."

Divided attention
Back in April, I wrote flippantly that the winner of the head-to-head battle would be the one that lured The Wall Street Journal columnist Walt Mossberg. And if that truly turns out to be the measure of victory next week, then Demo is already the winner, since Mossberg and his colleague Kara Swisher both have said they will be in San Diego.

But to Shipley, it's not really about which event comes out on top, since both seem certain to be packed. Instead, she laments the divided attention the presenting companies will receive.

"I really think the story here is the companies," Shipley said. "And I hope that as the media cover these events, they keep that in mind, because these guys have worked hard. If the story's about two media companies having a fight over the dates, that just doesn't do the (presenting) companies justice."

That said, Shipley is willing to acknowledge that Arrington's argument that his event serves its presenting companies better by being free--and therefore, presumably more honest in its selection process--has raised the awareness of both events.

"In some ways, I should be thanking Michael," she said of Arrington. "He's brought a lot of attention to these kinds of events."

On the other hand, not everyone in the industry sees value in either.

"I wouldn't spend time or money on either," said one San Francisco venture capitalist. "For me, the content of the show is secondary to the attendees. What's really funny is I've gotten about 30 e-mails from people coming from out of town, who I'll likely meet outside of the venue."

On the other hand, the VC is very familiar with the two events and what they have to offer, and isn't that impressed this year.

"If there was a huge differentiation in content, people would choose one or another," the VC said. "From what I can gather...the quality of these has dropped. I think they've had trouble finding (enough) interesting companies."

CNET News' Stefanie Olsen contributed to this report.

August 11, 2008 3:06 PM PDT

Cat fight! Arrington calls attention to Demo-related plagiarism claim

by Daniel Terdiman
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TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington is upset that a former Demo spokesperson is accusing his partner of plagiarism.

(Credit: Dan Farber/CNET News)

In a move guaranteed to stoke the fire of confrontation between the upcoming TechCrunch 50 and DemoFall conferences, TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington has decided to publicly air a bit of dirty laundry involving some plagiarism charges against his conference partner, Jason Calacanis.

On Saturday, Arrington posted Calacanis' suggestions for how start-up companies presenting at TechCrunch 50 can best present themselves and their products or services.

But on Sunday, after a blogger named Alexander Muse republished Calacanis' e-mail on his own site, Muse got an e-mail from a former Demo PR woman named Deb McAlister, alleging that much of what Calacanis had written had been plagiarized from an old Demo document giving suggestions to companies that participated in that conference.

"This 'advice' on demos is almost a verbatim lift from a piece I wrote over 10 years ago," McAlister seems to have written Muse. "Our original tips were in a slightly different order (the first tip was the same, we put the taboo about PowerPoint in at #2, etc.), but we covered EVERY one of these points in the written piece (which was on the DEMO web site for three years), in our coaching sessions for DEMO demonstrators, and in articles published in a range of magazines. Of the 2,200 or so words you included in your blog, 1,893 were DIRECTLY lifted from our piece."

Now, Demo Director Chris Shipley quickly posted a comment on Muse's blog saying that McAlister hasn't been connected with Demo for 12 years and that, "Her comment here represents her own opinion and claims, not that of DEMO."

But Arrington seems to have found a way to see past Shipley's disavowal of McAlister's plagiarism claim and to raise a ruckus about the situation. He followed Shipley's comment on Muse's blog with his own post calling attention to the situation and pointing an outraged finger at Demo. And then, in the comments section of his post, after Shipley's disavowal was pointed out, added, "The accusations were made in Demo's name, from a former partner of the event. At the very least, release the document in question."

To be sure, it would be interesting to see the original document, and to compare it to Calacanis'.

For his part, Calacanis wrote his own comment on Muse's blog, stressing his innocence: "Yes, let's see a side-by-side comparison ASAP! I'm a life-long journalist...and everything I write is 100 percent from my brain or attributed. This piece I wrote while doing 200 or so interview(s) for the TechCrunch50 event."

So far, I've been unable to track down McAlister to get a copy of the original article. And I would like to see it, so if you happen to have one, please send it my way.

But regardless, her lack of association for 12 years with Demo, and Shipley's post stating McAlister wasn't speaking for Demo should have nipped this whole situation in the bud, long before Arrington got up in arms about it.

On the other hand, by making a stink about it, Arrington gets to put TechCrunch 50 in the role of victim and, at the same time, gets to generate a lot of publicity for his event, including this article and others which are surely being written about this situation.

Of course, Demo gets its own share of free publicity, as well.

It makes me wonder if the two sides didn't get together recently and cook this up among themselves as a way to get people to pay attention to them.

Then again, Arrington's famous comment to me earlier this year that "Demo needs to die" makes me question whether he'd ever cooperate with Shipley on anything.

April 3, 2008 1:53 PM PDT

My take on Calacanis' view of the TC50/Demo kerfuffle

by Daniel Terdiman
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TechCrunch50 co-organizer Jason Calacanis says the conflict over the dates of his event and DemoFall's are the fault of the Demo organizers.

(Credit: Dan Farber/CNET News.com)

I'm reading Henry Blodget's story on Jason Calacanis' rant about how the Demo conference organizers are to blame for the scheduling conflict that pits TechCrunch 50 against DemoFall. And I have to say, I'm a little dubious of Calacanis' statements.

According to Calacanis--who gave Blodget an "exclusive" interview on the matter despite telling me Wednesday that he was deferring to TC50 co-organizer Michael Arrington on the matter--the conflict is all Demo's fault.

(Arrington, by the way, set the tone for the environment by telling me, bluntly: "Demo needs to die.")

Demo Executive Producer Chris Shipley "may be crying that we are taking her dates, but that is false," Blodget quotes Calacanis as saying. "Demo moved up their dates this year by three weeks to come after TechCrunch40. They (were) on 9/24 last year and we were the week before them. Demo decided to move their conference up to try and unseat us."

Now, I'm not involved in the date scheduling of either conference, but in a telephone interview Wednesday, Shipley told me that Demo schedules the dates of its events three years ahead of time and that the date of DemoFall 08 was publicly announced at the end of the 2007 fall event.

I've been trying to find proof of this announcement, and have so far been coming up short. But I do see proof, from a very old calendar page on Demo's site that listed the dates of Demo's main 2008 winter event all the way back when they were still planning their 2006 events.

I suppose even if Demo had only announced its fall dates at the end of the 2007 show, Calacanis' point could be valid if Shipley et al had tried to move their event in front of the expected date of the 2008 TechCrunch confab.

But if Shipley is telling the truth--and I have no reason to doubt her, especially given the calendar page I cite above--I think Calacanis may have his facts a bit twisted. After all, he doesn't offer any evidence that Demo tried to ace it out on dates other than the fact that DemoFall 08 is a couple of weeks earlier than was DemoFall 07.

But as Calacanis surely knows, conferences move their dates around all the time. Witness the Game Developers Conference, which in 2007 was the week before South by Southwest. In 2008, it was a month before, and in 2008 it will be two weeks after, if my math is right. The reality is: event scheduling, which is often done years ahead of time, is tricky, and it's somewhat rare for a conference to always be on the exact same dates.

Want proof of that? Well, TechCrunch 40 was a week later on the calendar last year than it is this year.

Another Calacanis statement to Blodget makes me wonder, as well. He said, "The marketplace is going to decide which conference model is better: pay for play or merit based with a $50,000 grand prize."

Well, let's assume for a moment that both events sell out, or at least get more or less the same attendance as they did a year ago. If that happens, how is a winner determined?

Not to take Shipley's side in this, but I sort of agree with her about one thing, and that is, in the end, the losers here are the entrepreneurs who are going to get wedged in between a news-hungry press trying to cover both shows and the VCs who want to be able to see what's hot.

Of course, Calacanis ended his bullet-pointed "interview" with what he termed a genuine offer of a job for Shipley.

"If she wants to do the right thing, she should resign from IDG/Demo after this year and join the TechCrunch50 event," Calacanis told Blodget. "We would love to have her on our team--that's a serious offer. She should be working with Mike and I and help us bring TechCrunch50 to Europe, India and Asia."

My guess is that Shipley is going to hold on to her current job. But I remain open to surprise.

April 2, 2008 5:48 PM PDT

Arrington: 'Demo needs to die'

by Daniel Terdiman
  • 5 comments

TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington, in discussing the decision to place TechCrunch 50 at the same time as DemoFall said, 'Demo needs to die.'

(Credit: Dan Farber/CNET News.com)

The scheduling of the TechCrunch 50 conference, which was announced Wednesday, has pit it directly against DemoFall, a long-standing event geared toward entrepreneurs and their products.

And while TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington and CEO Heather Harde insisted in interviews late Wednesday that their selection of September 8-10, 2008, as the dates for TechCrunch 50 was about the availability of an affordable San Francisco venue, Arrington also made his feelings about Demo clear.

"Demo needs to die," Arrington said in the interview. "It's just an old-school model...It clearly involves pay to play, and what we're offering is better."

By "pay to play," Arrington was referring to the five-figure fee that all companies that present at either Demo or DemoFall must pay for their spots.

TechCrunch 50, by comparison, will not charge the companies that present.

Demo Executive Producer Chris Shipley expressed disappointment on hearing the news that TechCrunch 50 had been scheduled for the same dates as DemoFall.

"I think that certainly...TechCrunch 50 is a great venue for young companies," Shipley said by phone from Madrid, Spain. "But to put it up against Demo means those companies are now going to be competing for attention, and I just don't see how that's good for entrepreneurs."

One problem with that argument, however, is that since TechCrunch 40--the slightly smaller 2007 precursor to TechCrunch 50--companies have had to choose one show or the other.

That's because both TechCrunch and Demo effectively require participating companies to be launching themselves or their products for the first time.

Still, any controversy over the timing of the two events is going to focus on the fact that TechCrunch 50 will take place on the same dates as DemoFall--Arrington told me he wasn't aware of the dates and that Harde had been in charge of scheduling--even though DemoFall's dates had long been announced.

"Venues are really hard," Arrington said of the location for TechCrunch 50, San Francisco's Design Center Concourse. "We really like this venue (and) this was the only dates we could get it."

He elaborated, saying that he and his fellow organizers needed to find a venue in San Francisco that was affordable and that could hold between 1,000 and 2,000 attendees.

"There aren't many venues (in San Francisco) where you can get 1,000 to 2,000 people sitting down," Arrington said.

While Arrington would not say how much money TechCrunch 40 made in 2007, he did say it was profitable.

He said that of some 1,100 attendees at the 2007 event, approximately 800 paid full price of $2,500, while about 100 students paid $490. That means the event brought in around $2.5 million in ticket sales alone, not counting what sponsors gave.

Shipley wouldn't say what DemoFall 2007 earned, but did say that the majority of the 650 to 700 attendees had paid. With tickets for that event costing $3,000, that means DemoFall likely earned well into seven figures as well, just from tickets. Presenting companies likely paid well more than $1 million more to demo.

But Arrington insisted that his event is better for early-stage entrepreneurs because presenting companies pay nothing to demo at TechCrunch 50.

For her part, Shipley said she appreciates that TechCrunch 50 doesn't charge its participating companies, but added that many companies that exhibit at Demo are established firms for whom the fees are not onerous.

In fact, she said the fees may well establish those that pay it as serious about their products in the minds of the press and venture capitalists that attend.

Still, she suggested Arrington's assertion that Demo needs to die is unfortunate.

"I'm not certain why it must die," Shipley said. "I think that there is a lot of room in the market for products and services that support entrepreneurs. And I don't see how it's a benefit to (the entrepreneurial ecosystem) to kill off a platform that's all about supporting entrepreneurs."

April 2, 2008 4:26 PM PDT

TechCrunch 50 scheduled to overlap with Demo

by Daniel Terdiman
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For years, the Demo conferences--one in the spring and another in the fall--have dominated the mindshare of the technology press and venture capitalists eager to see the hottest start-ups and new products at their public unveilings.

But now, Michael Arrington and Jason Calacanis have scheduled their TechCrunch 50 event--which will showcase 50 hand-selected start-ups--to overlap with DemoFall.

And besides the cachet that comes with being selected for the TechCrunch event--Arrington said in a blog post this afternoon that the 40 companies that participated last year have raised $143 million in venture capital to date--one major selling point for companies that might agonize over which event to attend is that TC 50 doesn't cost participants a dime.

DemoFall, by contrast, costs the 70 or so companies selected to attend well into five figures.

TechCrunch is also cheaper to buy a ticket for: $1,995 through July 15, and $2,995 afterwards, versus DemoFall's rate of $2,999.

So what's a start-up to do?

One thing seems clear: Both events will probably be slightly less rich with the best companies and products than they might otherwise have been, since some potential TC 50 selections will still no doubt choose to go to DemoFall.

After all, if you're a company that has raised millions of dollars in funding, the $15,000 or $20,000 it costs to take part in Demo isn't all that much.

Maybe the real question that will determine which event comes out on top is which one Wall Street Journal kingmaker Walt Mossberg, a longtime fixture at the Demo shows, chooses to cover. If I were an executive at a company vying for either event, I'd be calling Mossberg right now and asking politely if he knows.

And in the same vein, if I'm Arrington and Shipley, I'm trying to figure out the best way to get Mossberg to commit to my show.

Either way, it's a bold--and aggressive--move on Arrington's part. And it's sure to make him a whole bunch of new enemies, and a bunch of new friends. Which camp you fall into depends on whether you are part of the Demo family or not.

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Daniel Terdiman, uniquely positioned to take you into the middle of another side of technology, chronicles his explorations of the "fun beat," from cultural phenomena such as Burning Man to cutting-edge aircraft to game conventions.

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