World Domination Summit 2012: Community, Adventure, Service
Last June, I helped nine friends do something crazy. With the help of a few dozen volunteers, we staged a conference at the Portland Art Museum. We called this conference the World Domination Summit. After a year of planning and tons of work and worry, five hundred people came together and…well, the experience was truly awesome.
This year, we repeated the experiment but on a larger scale. Last weekend, this same group of ten people (along with another few dozen volunteers) brought one thousand people (1007 people, to be exact) to Portland's gorgeous Newmark Theater for another weekend of networking, sharing, and inspiration.
What is the World Domination Summit? It's tough to describe. And I know, I know - the name doesn't help. It's meant to be tongue-in-cheek. This isn't a gathering for super-villains or call girls or terrorists. Instead, WDS is a place for artists, entrepreneurs, bloggers, and world travelers to come together and compare notes.
Organizer Chris Guillebeau says that WDS is meant to answer the question: “How do you live a remarkable life in a conventional world?” He says that the conference's core values are Community, Adventure, and Service. Jonathan Fields described the conference as “Woodstock for world changers”, and that seems apt.
Change Your Self - Change the World We had some great speakers in 2011 for our first World Domination Summit. I feel like this year, our speakers took it to another level. (And wait until you see who we have slated for next year!)
This year, our first speaker was Dr. Brené Brown, a research professor at the University of Houston. Brown specializes in vulnerability and shame. About seven million people have watched her TEDx talk about vulnerability:
For the World Domination Summit, Brown talked about what she calls “the one true currency”. What's that? She says, “The only true currency in this bankrupt world is what you say to someone when you're being uncool…All the stuff that keeps you safe from feeling scary emotions? They also keep you from feeling the good emotions. You have to shake those off. You have to become vulnerable.”
She also made two profound points that are important for me and where I am in life: First, who you are will always trump who you think people want you to be. This is something I've learned over the past few years. Embracing it has changed my life. Next, Brown pointed out that you can't control if someone loves you back. She says you should love them anyway. Amen.
At the end of her talk, Brown draft Chris Guillebeau and the entire first row of the theater to come on stage to help her sing Journey's “Don't Stop Believin'”. (Though to make it more uncool, she used the Glee version.) It was great fun to be in a room with 1000 people singing this song.
Our second speaker was Scott Harrison, founder of Charity: Water. (Harrison and Guillebeau met while volunteering in Africa.) I didn't get to hear much of Harrison's talk, but all weekend were telling me how it moved them to tears. At the end, he asked each person in the audience to give up their next birthday in order to raise money for wells in developing nations. Almost everyone agreed to do so. It was awesome.
Other speakers on the first day included Susan Cain, who spoke about the power of introverts, and Scott Belsky, who talked about making ideas happen.
Day two started with Chris Brogan giving a geeky super-hero themed talk about being brave. He talked about untangling your life from other people's scripts. Other people's scripts weren't written for you, anyhow. He urged attendees not to settle, to not finish crappy books, to leave a restaurant if they don't like the menu, and so on. He also pointed out that it's not who you say you are that matters. It's what you do that matters. (This was a key theme in my talk, as well.)
Unfortunately, I didn't hear the rest of the day two speakers, which included Cal Newport of the Study Hacks blog. I was the final keynote speaker, and I was nervous as hell. so, I returned to my hotel room to practice my talk.
My talk - which I'll publish in full on Monday - was about personal transformation, about making big changes in your life. I stressed three keys to change:
- The power of yes. Yes is an open mind. Yes is a willingness to try new things. Yes is allowing yourself to be vulnerable.
- The power of focus. The ability to focus only on those things that are most important.
- The power of action. The strength to work hard, to get things done.
And, in the end, I argued that once you've made your personal transformation, once you've changed into the person you want to be, it's your responsibility to give back, to help others achieve change, too.
I'm not a public speaker - I'm a writer - so this was a terrifying experience for me. I prepared for weeks ahead of time, and I thought I had my talk down. In the end, however, I lost my way. After the speech, somebody asked me how I thought I did. I'd give myself a C, to be honest. It wasn't awful (I hope), but it sure wasn't Brené Brown!
There were other great speakers too, of course, including eighty different workshop sessions in the afternoons. There's no way I could attend everything. But based on the response of the conference attendees, World Domination Summit 2012 was a smashing success. People loved it.
Testimonials My favorite part of the weekend was seeing the skeptics won over. I know a lot of GRS readers think WDS sounds like a bunch of New Age hippie feel-good bullshit. Or that it's a haven for internet marketers. Neither of things is true. This conference is about making lasting change - in yourself and in others.
Chris Brogan, one of our speakers, was wary of the conference, but at the speaker dinner he confided, “J.D., if I'd known what this was about I would have been here the entire weekend. I want to come back as an attendee next year.” (Read Brogan's conference summary for more of his thoughts on WDS.)
At The Huffington Post, Ken Solin wrote:
And here's a text that one of our team members received after the conference was over:
But my favorite endorsement? I invited a woman I've been dating to sit in on part of the conference. It was completely outside her experience, and she didn't know what to expect. In the end she wrote to me: “Thank you. I really enjoyed this weekend. Thoroughly impressed, J.D.” It feels good when something you work hard to build is well received by the important people in your life.
The $100 Investment That last section sounds a little defensive. And maybe I am. It's just that every time I try to share about WDS at Get Rich Slowly, some readers have a knee-jerk negative reaction. They're unwilling to accept that this might be a positive force in the world.
And ultimately, that's what we want World Domination Summit to be: a positive force in the world. We're constantly brainstorming ways we can make a difference, not just in the lives of our attendees, but in the world at large. One of our three core values is Service, after all.
This year, this theme could be seen in Scott Harrison's talk about his Charity: Water project, which has raised millions of dollars to build wells in Africa. It could be seen in my own talk about personal change (which I'll post here on Monday), which I ended by arguing that after attendees change themselves, they should change the world. And it was seen in the attendee stories session, where folks shared the projects they've started to change the world.
But most of all, this desire to be a positive force in the world was felt at the very end of the conference, as Chris Guillebeau sent everyone on their way. He took the stage to tell a story. And to do something radical.
Last year, Chris lost money on the conference. WDS has no corporate sponsors, is run entirely on volunteer help (nobody is paid), and is essentially a not-for-profit organization. For the 2011 edition of the conference, Chris lost about $30,000 of his own money. This year, he invited more people and he raised ticket prices. As a result, we had money left over.
As Chris was pondering what to do with the money, he was approached by somebody who had attended the conference last year. This person wanted to do something special, something that might make a lasting difference. After some discussion, Chris and his “anonymous donor” reached an agreement. Together, they'd give $100 to every paid attendee, and they'd encourage folks to use this money to do something awesome.
Here's a quote from the conference send-off:
Several times during the weekend, I was almost moved to tears. One of those times was during Chris Guillebeau's generous introduction to my talk. (As I walked onto the stage to speak before 1000 people, I was trying not to cry.) Another one of those times was during the announcement of the $100 Investment. To me, this is what the World Domination Summit is all about: Finding awesome and creative ways to make positive changes, both in ourselves and in others.
But to me, the greatest testament to the World Domination Summit is this: Our venue has room for 924 attendees. After the conference, we allowed about a day for folks to register to return next year. We sold 843 tickets. That's how much people love the conference. And I love it too. I know some of you are still going to hate on it. I don't care. This reflects more on you than it does WDS. Because truly? The World Domination Summit is one of the best things I've ever been involved with. I'm proud to be a part of it. And I can't wait to help present WDS 2013 next year.
The original article can be found at GetRichSlowly.org:World Domination Summit 2012: Community, Adventure, Service