
Here’s yesterday’s presentation from the Inbound Marketing Summit. I’ll follow up in the next few days with posts covering the comedy writing homework assignment, the Hyde Park chapel story, and answer a few questions I received via twitter. Steve Garfield’s interview provides a little more detail.
It’s nice to be warm again.

My friend Melissa Mines and I presented at the GSMI Social Media Strategies Summit. As usual, when I visit San Francisco in September, I forgot that the climate can reach Ice Station Zebra conditions. Melissa, sporting a sleeveless blouse on the way to dinner in Union Square, hypothesized that most tourists also don’t pack appropriately, forgetting about the temp drop and remedying their mistake by purchasing a cheap sweatshirt from the first street vendor they can find. Which explains the following:

The next day at the conference, when our teeth stopped chattering, we presented a few case studies on Cisco’s work in the B2B social media space. In the Service Provider Marketing group, we have a relatively small, technical audience. I love the fact that we strive to balance the engineering content with some of the funny. Our presentation is below.
Like everyone one of my trips to San Francisco, I came home wishing I could have stayed longer, and sporting a new “Escape From Alcatraz” hoodie.

I spent some time this week at our Tewksbury, MA office meeting our mobile networking team, headed up by Ash Dahod, recently profiled in the Boston Globe. What a fun group. I filmed an into for a video travel blog we’ll be producing when one of my colleagues Angela Singhal-Whiteford treks to Kuala Lumpur, Mumbai and Delhi to visit with customers.
David Meerman Scott invited me to speak Friday afternoon at the VisibleGains B2B video roundtable, along with Steve Garfield and others. I shared a funny video and talked about some of the interesting things we’re doing with video, including the upcoming Doobie Brothers Cisco TelePresence event.
Update: Here’s a comprehensive review of the Doobie Brothers concert from Howard Lichtman.