Right, it's that time of the year again. TechEd season. To me, as a software engineer, this is better than Christmas. This year, it's the first time I'm going there as an SAP Mentor, so it's even more exciting and energizing. But also a lot more tiring...
I don't want to focus on the content too much, because
A: I haven't attended many sessions and
B: plenty of other people will cover that.
What I want to talk about, is about the atmosphere on the floor.
For me, it all started at the keynote.
Contrary to other years, the keynote was much less serious. In fact, I found that the speakers were taking themselves, and SAP, much less serious. And that's a good thing. Even the videos were a little bit silly, even though the message they brought was still very clear.
I like that. Self-mockery is a clear sign of confidence. SAP has moved from a defensive position, into a confident state of mind, where they know that their products are good, and they can joke about it.
That same attitude continued on the show-floor. I've seen multiple execs doing lectures (which I never really noticed a couple of years back) and they were delivering very clear and confident messages in a very humoristic way. (even the German ones. Yes, they do have humour)
As usual, there were certain main-topics that kept coming back everywhere. not unlike previous years, most sessions dealt about UX cloud and HANA. What I was missing a bit were the "old(er)" technologies. What's happening in the WebDynpro space? What's happening in the CRM space? What's happening in...
Obviously there were a couple of sessions dealing about existing technology here and there. I was actually hosting one of those. I tried to give a bit of counterweight to SAP Marketing and wanted to highlight existing technologies such as WebDynpro for ABAP, NWBC, BSP and even SAPGui. I figured that maybe 10 to 20 people would show up, but I was pretty amazed by the enormous crowd standing in front of me by the end of the session.
To me that proves that most customers are still way behind on SAP, and are actively looking for ways to leverage their current skills and to get on the journey towards SAP's vision. We as Partners, but also SAP, should actively help those customers to understand what strategy they must follow, in order to not get left behind.
The thing is though, I've seen a couple of UX presentations at TechEd, and unlike 2 years ago, they actually did a really good job at explaining that
When I went to TechEd in the past, I was always a bit shy to approach the guys in the mentor shirts. I was curious to see if that was just me. To my disappointment, it's apparently not just me being shy, because there were very little people that reached out to me on the showfloor.
In fact, the only time that people reached out to me was right after my presentation, when I was wearing a plain white shirt and a vest.
That's something that needs work.
On the other hand, SAP executives suddenly became much more approachable when I was wearing the mentor shirts.
Maybe next year, we'll just have to put something on the shirts like: "Talk to me, I'm lonely" :smile:
But there's no doubt that the SAP Mentors are really jamming the community and the culture.
There were a lot of good things going on at TechEd, but it's never perfect. One of the things that I always put on my wishlist every year, is a fully equipped Community Clubhouse. Every year there is a clubhouse, but...
I feel that the clubhouse is not even close to what it could potentially be.
Now it was basically a coffee stand and some seats -which isn't bad to start- but I was hoping for whiteboards (and markers), hangout corners, posters, a photographer... Or even better, a real bar.
Something like an Irish pub where you can come to relax and talk to eachother. And maybe that's the perfect place to feature topic-leaders, meet eachother in real life, feature the other communities such as StackOverflow, ExperienceSAP, SAPHANA,... and bring communities and people alike, closer together.
Another thing that struck me, and even annoyed me, was the poor acoustics. The lectures given on the show floor really suffered from all the noise out there. The expert sessions were even worse. 2 tiny speakers to make yourself heard by 50 or more people, whilst only 15 yards further, someone else was trying to do the same and make his voice heard over yours...
That wasn't working too well. It's an issue to be tackled next edition. How can we isolate sessions from the noise on the showfloor?
Next year:
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