Colin Loretz, founder of Ignite Reno, makes a speedy presentation.
Colin Loretz, founder of Ignite Reno, makes a speedy presentation.

Entrepreneurs are often told to join professional networking
organizations when theyโ€™re getting started. Theyโ€™re advised
to hand out business cards and schmooze a little.

But this doesnโ€™t work for everybodyโ€”at least, not for
Colin Loretz, a local, self-employed web developer. Upon graduating
from college, he tried attending meetings and luncheons held by all the
standard acronyms.

โ€œEverything they were teaching was, well, kind of old school,
and they werenโ€™t really applicable to what I was doing,โ€
says Loretz.

But Ignite Seattle was. Started in 2006 by techies Brady Forrest of
Oโ€™Reilly Radar and Bre Pettis with the e-zine Make, Ignite
Seattle was created with two goals: Enlighten audiences, and be quick
about it. Five minutes, to be exact. Presenters can talk about
anythingโ€”though the first event was more tech-focused, topics now
range from the technical to the absurdโ€”using 20 PowerPoint slides
that advance automatically every 15 seconds, which comes to five
minutes per presentation.

โ€œIt was originally created as an open source TED [technology,
education and design] conference,โ€ explains Loretz. โ€œA TED
conference is this elite event that happens once a year in the Bay
Area, costs $10,000 to attend, and you have to be invited. So Ignite
was inspired from that content, with a focus on technology, but
allowing it to be free, and giving anyone who desired to speak a way to
do so.โ€

Ignite Seattle took off. The first event hosted more than 250
attendees, and most recently, Ignite 8 saw more than 500. Like others
in cities, Loretz adopted the project, bringing it to Reno last
March.

โ€œI was surprised at the turnout and the diversity of the
presentations given,โ€ says Michelle Montoya, a college English
professor who presented at the first Ignite Reno. โ€œFrom education
to fire prevention, multitasking to remodeling, thereโ€™s no limit
to what people can present.โ€

Her own presentation, coaxed to life by Loretz, was entitled
โ€œMultitasking 101: How to Get a Lot of Shit Done.โ€ Montoya
also joined pals Mike Henderson and Mike McDowell in a presentation
about the benefits of drinking beer from a tall can as opposed to a
short can, bottle or keg. Loretzโ€™s most recent presentation was
called โ€œDiagnosing Technology as a Mental Disorder,โ€ a
comedy sketch that used technology to diagnose his audienceโ€™s
โ€œsymptoms.โ€ And last summer, Henderson presented โ€œHow
to Remodel Your Home Without Destroying Your Marriage.โ€ Anything
goes here, within reasonโ€”no sales pitches or advertisements,
although raising awareness about issues or causes is allowed. Planned
Parenthood once presented a talk about the importance of sex ed.
Serious, professional presentations are always welcome, too.

โ€œGiving a normal presentation, you show slides, talk about
each one until youโ€™re done, and then go on to the next one.
Itโ€™s easy to do, but itโ€™s boring,โ€ says Henderson.
โ€œThis structure forces you not to be boring. โ€ฆ It feels
more like a performance than a presentation. Itโ€™s like
storytelling. You have to have good timing. You have to design slides
that look cool. And it helps you with public speaking. So you build all
kinds of skills, and you donโ€™t pay anything or have anything to
lose.โ€

Ignite Reno, now a quarterly event, takes place at Amendment 21, so
participants can eat and drink, and so far, admission is free. The goal
right now is to build a steady pool of attendees who want to socialize,
share their knowledge, learn something and have fun. The next event, on
Jan. 14, is themed โ€œWhat have you learned in 2009?โ€

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