VRM CRM 2010: Difference between revisions
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The common ground to be built out is the marketplace where real two-way relationships can take place, and economic value can be unlocked and grown with minimal friction. This marketplace is potentially enormous, but as yet it does not exist. It is the intention of ProjectVRM and many other interested parties that on 28 August this new marketplace will be born and start growing. (Background posts are [http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/vrm/2010/07/28/vrm-crm-2/ here], [http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/vrm/2010/07/23/positioning-vrm/ here] and [http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/vrm/2010/07/23/cooperation-vs-coersion/ here].) | The common ground to be built out is the marketplace where real two-way relationships can take place, and economic value can be unlocked and grown with minimal friction. This marketplace is potentially enormous, but as yet it does not exist. It is the intention of ProjectVRM and many other interested parties that on 28 August this new marketplace will be born and start growing. (Background posts are [http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/vrm/2010/07/28/vrm-crm-2/ here], [http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/vrm/2010/07/23/positioning-vrm/ here] and [http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/vrm/2010/07/23/cooperation-vs-coersion/ here].) | ||
The purpose of the | The purpose of the workshop is to get this work started. Since this will be the first VRM+CRM event of any kind, the potential leverage of participating in this workshop is quite large. | ||
== Agenda == | == Agenda == | ||
This is a workshop, rather than a conference. | This is a workshop, rather than a conference. We will have speakers and panels, but only in the mornings, and mostly for the purpose of briefing participants and helping everybody get acquainted with each others' work — in particular what VRM developers have been up to over the past several years, how this matches up with where CRM (and social CRM) are going, and what's happening in some verticals (Real Estate, Health Care, Government, Telecom, etc.). The meat of the workshop over both days will be in the breakout sessions, where topics are chosen by the particpants in an unconference open space format. You can read more orabout open space [http://www.co-intelligence.org/P-Openspace.html here]. | ||
Doc Searls, who runs ProjectVRM at Harvard's Berkman Center, will lead the workshop. Kaliya Hamlin will guide the unconference/open space parts of the workshop. Kaliya is a veteran facilitator of open space workshops, and co-runs the | Doc Searls, who runs ProjectVRM at Harvard's Berkman Center, will lead the workshop. Kaliya Hamlin will guide the unconference/open space parts of the workshop. Kaliya is a veteran facilitator of open space workshops, and co-runs the series with [http://windley.com Phil Windley] (who will also be at VRM_CRM 2010). VRM has from the beginning had a second home at IIW workshop sessions, and much VRM development has either originated at IIWs or been moved forward at them (even ones that have not focused on identity). We expect the same kind of progress at this workshop as well | ||
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Note: This is tentative at the moment and subject to change. | Note: This is tentative at the moment and subject to change. | ||
8:00am Bagels, coffee | 8:00am Bagels, coffee | ||
9:00am Welcome and agenda - Doc Searls | 9:00am Welcome and agenda - Doc Searls | ||
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
9:30am VRM Baseline | 9:30am VRM Baseline | ||
* VRM overview, setting the stage | * VRM overview, setting the stage | ||
* VRM developments | * VRM developments | ||
** R-buttons/ListenLog/Emancy - Doc Searls, Adam Marcus | ** R-buttons/ListenLog/Emancy - Doc Searls, Adam Marcus | ||
Line 42: | Line 42: | ||
** Search - Joe Andrieu | ** Search - Joe Andrieu | ||
** Personal Data Store (PDS) - Iain Henderson | ** Personal Data Store (PDS) - Iain Henderson | ||
** Personal Data Exchange (PDX) | ** Personal Data Exchange (PDX)- Drummond Reed | ||
** Context Automation | ** Context Automation - Kynetx Rule Language (KRL) - Phil Windley | ||
10:45am CRM baseline talk and panel | 10:45am CRM baseline talk and panel | ||
Line 51: | Line 51: | ||
11:45am Warmup for lunch and afternoon breakout sessions - Kaliya Hamlin | 11:45am Warmup for lunch and afternoon breakout sessions - Kaliya Hamlin | ||
12:00pm Lunch at Harkness Commons | 12:00pm Lunch at Harkness Commons | ||
1:15pm Setting topics for the afternoon breakout sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin | 1:15pm Setting topics for the afternoon breakout sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin | ||
Line 57: | Line 57: | ||
1:45pm Breakout Open Space (unconference) Sessions | 1:45pm Breakout Open Space (unconference) Sessions | ||
(was spam here) | |||
5:00pm Closing session | 5:00pm Closing session with reports on breakout sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin | ||
6:00pm Briefing for Friday - Doc | 6:00pm Briefing for Friday - Doc | ||
7:00pm | 7:00pm Here we have reservations at a number of local restaurants. You can sign up on the wiki at the link above, and/or on sign-up sheets Topics will be chosen at the workshop. Payment is "dutch." | ||
===Friday, 27 August=== | ===Friday, 27 August=== | ||
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* Telecom - Julian Gay | * Telecom - Julian Gay | ||
* Moderator - Chris Carfi | * Moderator - Chris Carfi | ||
11:40am Setting topics for the breakout workshop sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin | 11:40am Setting topics for the breakout workshop sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin | ||
Line 98: | Line 97: | ||
3:30-4:00pm Closing session, with reports on breakout sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin | 3:30-4:00pm Closing session, with reports on breakout sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin | ||
5:00pm | 5:00pm | ||
Line 107: | Line 104: | ||
Pound Hall is at 1557 Massachusetts Avenue ("Mass Ave") on the Harvard Campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Mass Ave runs up Harvard's west side from Harvard Square. [http://www.law.harvard.edu/about/map.html Here is a map.] It is a modern brick building diagonally northeast of Cambridge Common (a park) and just south of a new building still under construction. | Pound Hall is at 1557 Massachusetts Avenue ("Mass Ave") on the Harvard Campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Mass Ave runs up Harvard's west side from Harvard Square. [http://www.law.harvard.edu/about/map.html Here is a map.] It is a modern brick building diagonally northeast of Cambridge Common (a park) and just south of a new building still under construction. | ||
Street parking is limited to only two hours, and is strictly enforced. Public parking tends to be expensive. | Street parking is limited to only two hours, and is strictly enforced. Public parking tends to be expensive. | ||
The best way to come is by subway. Pound Hall is a short walk up "Mass Ave" from the Harvard station on the MBTA Red Line. | |||
If you are driving, we recommend parking at the Alewife station at the end of the Red Line (it's at the inbound end of Highway 2). The cost is $7 per day, trains run constantly, and the cost of a ride is $1.50. Harvard is 3 stops (only 8 minutes) from Alewife. | If you are driving, we recommend parking at the Alewife station at the end of the Red Line (it's at the inbound end of Highway 2). The cost is $7 per day, trains run constantly, and the cost of a ride is $1.50. Harvard is 3 stops (only 8 minutes) from Alewife. | ||
If you are flying in, there are many hotels close to the Red Line. The Harvard station is about 20 minutes from downtown Boston. From Logan Airport, you take the | If you are flying in, there are many hotels close to the Red Line. The Harvard station is about 20 minutes from downtown Boston. From Logan Airport, you take the Silver Line to the South Street station, also on the Red Line. Take the inbound train toward Alewife. (It becomes outbound when you pass the Park Street station.) Again, it's $1.50, leaves frequently, and is nearly as fast as a taxi. If there's traffic, it's faster. | ||
==Sponsors== | ==Sponsors== | ||
Latest revision as of 20:07, 12 December 2011
Locations
Day One, Pound 102, Harvard Law School
Day Two, Pound 200, Harvard law School
Overview
VRM + CRM 2010 is a workshop for VRM and CRM developers and other professionals, where the process of building out common ground between the two can begin. It is hosted by ProjectVRM and the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University, and will take place at Pound Hall in Harvard Law School on Thursday and Friday, 26 and 27 August. It's free of charge, and you can register here.
The common ground to be built out is the marketplace where real two-way relationships can take place, and economic value can be unlocked and grown with minimal friction. This marketplace is potentially enormous, but as yet it does not exist. It is the intention of ProjectVRM and many other interested parties that on 28 August this new marketplace will be born and start growing. (Background posts are here, here and here.)
The purpose of the workshop is to get this work started. Since this will be the first VRM+CRM event of any kind, the potential leverage of participating in this workshop is quite large.
Agenda
This is a workshop, rather than a conference. We will have speakers and panels, but only in the mornings, and mostly for the purpose of briefing participants and helping everybody get acquainted with each others' work — in particular what VRM developers have been up to over the past several years, how this matches up with where CRM (and social CRM) are going, and what's happening in some verticals (Real Estate, Health Care, Government, Telecom, etc.). The meat of the workshop over both days will be in the breakout sessions, where topics are chosen by the particpants in an unconference open space format. You can read more orabout open space here.
Doc Searls, who runs ProjectVRM at Harvard's Berkman Center, will lead the workshop. Kaliya Hamlin will guide the unconference/open space parts of the workshop. Kaliya is a veteran facilitator of open space workshops, and co-runs the series with Phil Windley (who will also be at VRM_CRM 2010). VRM has from the beginning had a second home at IIW workshop sessions, and much VRM development has either originated at IIWs or been moved forward at them (even ones that have not focused on identity). We expect the same kind of progress at this workshop as well
Notes for each breakout session will be at the VRM_CRM_2010_Sessions_Wiki, and at other wiki pages linked to from there.
Here are the tentative agendas for both days:
Thursday, 26 August
Note: This is tentative at the moment and subject to change.
8:00am Bagels, coffee
9:00am Welcome and agenda - Doc Searls
9:20am Introduction of afternoon sessions - Kaliya Hamlin
9:30am VRM Baseline
- VRM overview, setting the stage
- VRM developments
- R-buttons/ListenLog/Emancy - Doc Searls, Adam Marcus
- Legal developments - Renee Lloyd
- Search - Joe Andrieu
- Personal Data Store (PDS) - Iain Henderson
- Personal Data Exchange (PDX)- Drummond Reed
- Context Automation - Kynetx Rule Language (KRL) - Phil Windley
10:45am CRM baseline talk and panel
- CRM baseline - Dan Miller
- CRM panel - Dan Miller, Denis Pombriant, Josh Weinberger, John McKean
11:45am Warmup for lunch and afternoon breakout sessions - Kaliya Hamlin
12:00pm Lunch at Harkness Commons
1:15pm Setting topics for the afternoon breakout sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin
1:45pm Breakout Open Space (unconference) Sessions
(was spam here)
5:00pm Closing session with reports on breakout sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin
6:00pm Briefing for Friday - Doc
7:00pm Here we have reservations at a number of local restaurants. You can sign up on the wiki at the link above, and/or on sign-up sheets Topics will be chosen at the workshop. Payment is "dutch."
Friday, 27 August
Note: This is tentative at the moment and subject to change.
9:00am Welcome and agenda - Doc Searls
9:10am Introductions (for those who missed Day One) and prep for unconference sessions — Kaliya Hamlin
9:30am VRM Technology panel
- Iain Henderson
- Phil Windley
- Drummond Reed
- Craig Burton
10:30am Verticals panel
- Real Estate - Bill Wendell
- Health Care - Adrian Groper
- Government (GRM) - Britt Blaser
- Telecom - Julian Gay
- Moderator - Chris Carfi
11:40am Setting topics for the breakout workshop sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin
11:50-12:20 Lunch discussions at Harkness Common
12:30-1:30 Breakout Session
1:30pm-2:30 Breakout Session
2:30-3:30pm Breakout Session
3:30-4:00pm Closing session, with reports on breakout sessions - Led by Kaliya Hamlin
5:00pm
Location and Getting there
Pound Hall is at 1557 Massachusetts Avenue ("Mass Ave") on the Harvard Campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Mass Ave runs up Harvard's west side from Harvard Square. Here is a map. It is a modern brick building diagonally northeast of Cambridge Common (a park) and just south of a new building still under construction.
Street parking is limited to only two hours, and is strictly enforced. Public parking tends to be expensive.
The best way to come is by subway. Pound Hall is a short walk up "Mass Ave" from the Harvard station on the MBTA Red Line.
If you are driving, we recommend parking at the Alewife station at the end of the Red Line (it's at the inbound end of Highway 2). The cost is $7 per day, trains run constantly, and the cost of a ride is $1.50. Harvard is 3 stops (only 8 minutes) from Alewife.
If you are flying in, there are many hotels close to the Red Line. The Harvard station is about 20 minutes from downtown Boston. From Logan Airport, you take the Silver Line to the South Street station, also on the Red Line. Take the inbound train toward Alewife. (It becomes outbound when you pass the Park Street station.) Again, it's $1.50, leaves frequently, and is nearly as fast as a taxi. If there's traffic, it's faster.