The Ignite format’s motto is “Enlighten us, but make it quick!” It takes your standard speaker-and-audience formula and adds some interesting constraints:
This format forces speakers to get to their point quickly, and even experience speakers stumble on their first attempt.
The simultaneous best and worst thing about Ignite events is that you don’t have to be a big name to end up onstage. You have to have knowledge of and passion for the topic that you’re presenting, and this opens the stage to people who otherwise wouldn’t get a chance to share their ideas with an audience. This more open format seems to encourage more mixing and meeting during the breaks before, during, and after the presentations, which is why I say that Ignite is an indicator of a thriving community. It also means that you’re more likely to see people flop onstage every now and again. For many people, both speakers and audience, last Thursday’s Ignite was their first one, and that newness gave the event a little extra charge.
There’s always a t-shirt at Ignite gatherings that amuses me; my favourite T-shirt of the evening was this one:
Ignite Tampa Bay 2014 kicked off with opening remarks by Chris Krimitsos, who did a fine job setting the stage for the evening’s event. It’s customary to perform a little local boosterism at the start of an Ignite event, and in Tampa’s case, here are the encouraging tidbits of information that Chris provided:
Florida’s undergoing a lot of change, and we have to be ready for it. Poking fun a people’s fondness for the status quo, he quipped “the only person who really invites change is a baby in a wet diaper”.
Jessica Bellman’s piece was titled Figuring it out backwards, and focused on the benefits of doing things “backwards” — that is, in the opposite direction of what’s “natural”. An example she cited for projects was instead of planning forward from a start date, work backwards from the due date. Sometimes, in order to solve a problem, you need to turn it upside down.
Entrepreneurs project confidence, said Jonathan Malkin, but they’re prone to depression like the rest of us. I myself know some people who gone into business for themselves, who in Malkin’s words, are “killing it in public, but struggling with depression in private.” He interviewed a number of entrepreneurs about their struggle with depression, including Denver-based entrepreneur Brad Feld (whom I saw speak in Toronto in late 2012), and says that having people in your life, whether friends, family, or mental health professionals, is probably the best medicine.
Roy Stegman works in a recording studio, and he says that being brutally honest is an asset in his job. He learned that value having gone through boot camp during his stint in the military, and from that he experience, he learned the value of harsh feedback (and yes, he brought up R. Lee Ermey’s role as the drill sergeant in Full Metal Jacket). “Tact is commendable, but should we commend mediocrity?” he asked.
In keeping with the spirit of his message, it must be noted that while his presentation started off strong, he lost his way about half-way through the presentation and stumbled his way to the conclusion. In my time at Microsoft, I cut presenters who did a better job than he did.
The very bright and enthusiastic Katie Douglas told us recent surveys of youth showed that many didn’t know that the United States was originally made up of 13 colonies and thought that the US gained independence from France. Even I, who grew up on Canadian history lessons rather than American ones, know better. She said that this lack of knowledge comes over-involvement in the trivial and a lack of involvement in civics. Her presentation received a big round of applause.
Mical Johnson calls the time when he had to help his wife give birth to their son on the side of the road in their car as “the moment that changed everything” for him. There was no medical assistance — or any assistance — around. He credits his “being there” — focused on the task and nothing else — for a successful delivery, and used that story to explain the power of focus and being in the moment.
Jessica Rivelli’s presentation was a laundry list of women leaders from whom today’s women can draw inspiration:
It’s not really an Ignite until someone brings the expletives, and the biggest source of them was Greg Ross-Munro in his presentation, Buspreneurship has its privileges. Greg talked about his experience on Startup Bus, the event in which people pile on a bus for a days-long trip, come up with an idea for an application, and build both the application and the business around it, while on the bus. If you can build software in cramped, smelly, moving quarters, you can do anything, he suggested. The limited time and resources on the bus make focus necessary; he said that Startup Bus’ “inflexibility is the energy” that helps its participants get things done. Although he initially said “There’s no fucking way I’m doing that again” at the end of his first Startup Bus experience in 2011, he did it again, and just came from the first Startup Bus in Africa.
Of the speakers at Ignite Tampa, the best-known was probably Sean Morris, whom you may have seen if you watch American Ninja Warrior. He’s appeared on the show in four different seasons, and went to the Mount Midoriyama finals twice. He literally competed to the beat of his own drummer, as he always wore headphones. He says that having his own music made the event less stressful:
His presentation, naturally, was about being on American Ninja Warrior — and the lessons he learned from doing so. Many people who train to be on Ninja Warrior train for specific obstacles on the show; some even build replicas of the obstacles to train on. Sean prefers to do general training and focus on skills that will serve him well, such as balance, strength, endurance, and so on. That way, he’s well prepared even if the course designers come up with new obstacles.
His other advice includes being aware of your habits (and modifying them if necessary), and making sure that if you have to do something repeatedly, make it fun. He also says that your real competition is you: rather than ask if you’re better than someone else, what you should be asking is “Am I better than I was a week ago?”
He closed his presentation and the first half of speakers by performing some balance tricks on a wire rig that he brought:
Lindsey Nickel’s presentation, I am More, covered a program to help adolescent girls develop self-respect, self-confidence, and self-esteem. Suicide is the third leading cause of death among teens, she said, and a lot of it is driven through the messages we send them, through daily interactions and the media. Happiness come from doing good and caring about people, and the I am More program teaches young girls to be more than a number of the scale or on someone’s arbitrary 1 – 10 beauty scale. The program has shown success with over 1,000 teenagers, who showed a drop in self-deprecating behaviour and greater confidence.
“Let’s move from a nation of Kardashians to a nation of Thatchers!” she closed, to applause.
Ned Averill-Snell started his presentation with a story about a friend who’d moved to Tampa from Philadelphia and after a year of living here, was complaining that there was nothing to do in this city. He was surprised because…
…the arts are more popular than Tampa Bay than sports. It’s just that the really interesting stuff is the small stuff — the local indie live theatre, music, art galleries, and so on, and he’s right. I have been here that long, and there are gems that you can find here in “The Other Bay Area” — pick up a copy of the Tampa Bay edition of alt-weekly Creative Loafing to get a taste. I’ll be blogging about this stuff regularly.
Vulnerability and weakness are not the same thing, argued Aubrey Goodman, who came up with my favourite definition of the evening. He defined rich as “having the ability to be generous without hesitation,” which was my favourite definition of the evening. It got a lot of applause.
Jonathan Cordeau spent the last ten years as an entrepreneur and the better part of the last six months in Silicon Valley. He says that the most important lesson he learned is how to say “NO”. It’s not about being negative, but knowing where to draw the line, be selective, and focus your time and energy towards your goals, in the same way that Apple says it says “a thousand ‘no’s’ for every ‘yes'”. “‘No’ also makes you value ‘yes’ more,” he says.
Ashok Kartham is the president of TiE Tampa, a non-profit group made up of local entrepreneurs whose goal is to foster entrepreneurship in Tampa through mentoring, networking, and education. He’s got a lot of ideas, including one I really like: borrowing some NASA appeal and branding Florida as the next go-to place to launch your big idea. He suggests that Florida’s quality of life — beaches, warm weather, no state personal income tax, and its attractions, make it an excellent place to live, work and play:
…and since Tampa’s still fresh from the success of having IIFA (“The Indian Oscars”) being held here, he had to throw in a quick Bollywood dance number into his presentation:
Bill Shaw of Tampa Hackerspace had to make it clear that while “hacker” is often used in the mainstream to refer to people who maliciously attack computer systems, the true definition is that a hacker is someone who learns by doing. Hackers both break and make things to learn. He talked about hacker culture, why we need it, and “the wonderful things that happen when you put a techie and a creative together in the same room.”
Mark Lombardi-Nelson apologized in advance for all the memes he was going to show us in his five minutes. Even the title of his presentation was a meme: Challenge accepted.
In his presentation, he talked about giving himself a new challenge every month. “They teach you,” he said of his self-imposed challenges, many of which — including a become a vegan for a month — weren’t all that fun and often earned mockery from his friends. He wasn’t deterred, though: “It’s great when someone calls you crazy,” he said.
His current challenge: to make a handwritten thank-you card for someone to whom he owes gratitude, every day of this month.
The final Ignite presentation of the evening was delivered by Paola Chamorro Ward, who was born and grew up in Colombia. When she and her husband were dating, he said that what he knew about Colombia were its exports: “Coffee, drugs, Shakira, and Sofia Vergara”. She talked about the Colombian people’s determination to change their country’s image, highlighting the fact that it’s the second most biodiverse country in the world, as well as the happiest, and the home of an impressive culture and cuisine.
Colombia is finding its way out of the darkness, she says, and perhaps we can borrow some of their tricks.
In his writeup of Ignite Tampa Bay 2014 in the Tampa Bay Business Journal, Eric Snider wrote:
Call it the anti-TED Talks. Ignite Tampa Bay is not a forum for gurus, mavens, wonks, tastemakers and billionaires. It’s about real people spewing unvarnished truth as they see it.
The second annual Ignite took place Thursday night at the Cuban Club in Ybor City. Twenty speakers. Five-minute speeches. Twenty slides per.
An estimated audience of 350 filled up most of the historic theater. No sitting on your hands at this to-do. The crowd effusively applauded all the orators, some of whom were more deserving than others.
Up on stage, it wasn’t always pretty. You could hear the dry mouth, picture the flop sweat, wince when ideas drifted or a speech went off the rails. But you also nodded at something you never thought of before, laughed at a well-timed quip. Mostly you admired their courage just to get up there.
It may not have always been pretty, but it was engaging from start to finish, and I’m glad to see people doing more than just sitting passively in front of a screen and actually getting involved in their community. We’ll have to see how many people take up the challenge that the organizers left at the very end of the event: to perform one unselfish act for someone in the community every week.
I’m glad that I attended Ignite Tampa Bay 2014, and I’ll happily throw my hat in the ring for the 2015 event.
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The bit about the Startup Bus got me thinking about variations on the idea. Perhaps renting an empty prison cellblock for a week or two? Or have the SURVIVOR reality series feature a "techie" cast for a season?
(One wonders what awesome apps the Gilligan's Island castaways might have developed before their rescue, if they hadn't spent all their time in not thinking about building a raft or boat.)
Thanks for a great write-up about the event. BTW, it was the 4th annual IGNITE Tampa event. It started at the former Quorum hotel in 2011; then moved to the Glazer Children's Museum in 2012. Last year, we rocked the Tampa Theatre with 30 speakers and 800+ tickets sold! This year we cut it back to its roots of an intimate stage and only 20 speakers. The energy in the crowd was awesome.
Regards,
Peter Radizeski, co-founder of IGNITE Tampa and BarCamp Tampa Bay
My pleasure, Peter, and thanks for the fact check -- I'll correct the article!