PyCon 2008: Small Project, Big Impact, Lasting Effect
posted by Daniel Schneider at
Thursday, September 18, 2008

When the organizers of the main community conference for the Python programming language contacted Page One to do PR for them, their goals were modest -- just stir up some interest… oh, and turn it into the JavaOne of Python. Yikes!
Fortunately, Google (and YouTube), Microsoft, Canonical, and many, many other big brands backed PyCon. Page One loves working with developers so we accepted a small project to give back to the open source community and to gain experience with the Python community. Due to the small size of the project, PyCon organizers were only expecting a few press clippings here and there. A couple clips = success. Not hard, right?
Right away I realized that PyCon had almost zero name recognition. “What is PyCon?” or “Who do you represent?” reporters and bloggers kept asking me. Pitching the conference as a standalone event proved quite challenging. So I moved on to coupling it with other Python news (oh, by the way Guido Van Rossum is leading a session on that topic at PyCon next month!). In my opinion, that was the most fun part of the whole experience – looking for story pitches where I could legitimately insert a PyCon angle. And it worked. One story in particular was completely focused on a separate issue altogether, yet the PyCon people dominated the copy.


Labels: Daniel Schneider, Page One PR, PyCon, Python Promotion
1 Comments:
Daniel, this was a great success for PyCon. Lonn and I used this as a case study when we were talking to Google about helping them with the launch of Google I/O. I think it helped our position as the go-to company that can reach developers.
My favorite media interaction was the NPR Chicago interview you hosted that had the reporter trying to bring the conversation back to Chicago Pizza in the context of software development parties. You were so close to getting Fox News to go down to the show with a video crew.
I think that using the conference as an event to talk about the changes to Python 3.0 also helped drive the buzz that developed around the conference.
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