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01/26/12 | Uncategorized

Women In Tech: Start Speaking At Conferences

By Chiu-Ki Chan (Android Developer, Monkey Write)
My resolution this year is to be a public speaker. One of the difficulties in breaking into the speaking circuits is to be aware of conferences six months in advance to meet the call for participation deadlines, so whenever I hear about one, I share it with others.

Recently I shared the call for participation for FluentConf:

“Are you a JavaScript performance guru? Have you got big ideas and mad JavaScript skills? Do you know the ins and outs of future ECMAScript specifications? Are you building or using new languages on top of the JavaScript runtime? Have you tied Node.js into beautiful knots to build out your app’s back end? Are you pushing WebGL to its limits? If so, we strongly encourage you to send in a proposal to speak at Fluent 2012!”

Someone responded that she was not guru enough to speak, so she will just attend. This is so not true!

I strongly believe that everyone has something to share, and we can all make the world a better place by contributing what we know.

Estelle Weyl put it much more eloquently:

“Realize that many people speaking at conferences aren’t gurus at all. They just feel comfortable enough in a single sub-topic to present on that topic. Realize, if someone knows your topic like the back of their hand, they’re not going to attend your session. Instead, they’ll attend a session where the material is new.


Please, please, please submit talks in the niches you feel comfortable in. If all women wait until they master every nuance of their primary programming language we likely would have even fewer female presenters. If, in general, men waited for complete mastery too, we likely wouldn’t have enough presenters to have conferences.”

Read the full post here.

I reached out to O’Reilly to let them know that their call for participation is too intimating for first-timers, and they added an extra paragraph in response:

“New to the speaking circuit? Never fear, we want to hear from you too! We’re actively seeking new voices and off-the-beaten-path topics to put on stage at Fluent. Any ideas, best practices, challenges, etc. that you’ve encountered and conquered are fair game—if it’s important to you, it’s probably important for others as well.”

This captures the spirit of conferences much better – you are there to share your stories. Think through your day. Did you fix a particularly nasty bug? You got a story. Did you scout all over the internet and finally figured out how to implement that feature you wanted? You got a story. Did you chain up two seemingly unrelated tools and came up with a solution to your problem? You got a story.

Take the stage and share your stories. The world will thank you.

This post was originally posted at Square Island.

Photo credit: Alexandre Dulaunoy on Flickr.
About the guest blogger: Chiu-Ki Chan worked at Google as a software engineer for over six years, and spent a year and a half at two startups. She went independent last year with her own mobile development company. The first title is Monkey Write, an app for learning Chinese writing. Follow her on Twitter at @chiuki.

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