Site icon Brent Ozar

Comparing Conferences: AWS re:Invent, Google Cloud Next, Microsoft Ignite, PASS Summit, and SQL Intersection

I have this weird job where I get to pick which conferences I go to, so, I, uh, go to a lot of them. Here’s how a few of them stack up.

Amazon Web Services re:Invent

I love AWS. I use AWS products every day. But I wouldn’t go to this conference again regardless of price, and that says a lot. You’re paying to get mostly low-level marketing spam. If you think you want to go, watch a few sessions on YouTube, and then decide.

Best I can tell from talking to attendees, this conference is best suited for entry-level education (folks who haven’t used AWS technologies before, and want a lot of primers, fast) and people who want to network with a lot of other AWS users & vendors, fast. If you want to find a new job in the AWS field, it might make sense.

Google Cloud Next

Eric Schmidt at Google Cloud Next

I would totally attend this conference again. There is no way they’re making money on this conference – they’re losing their shirt, and you can tell. The value for attendee dollars spent is huge. (I do regret not getting my Google SRE book signed, though.)

Microsoft Ignite

Google Site Reliability Engineers chatting about outages

If you want to ask deeply technical or architectural questions to Microsoft employees who wrote the products you use, this is a great conference to attend. However, when in doubt about attending a session or not, just skip it – and spend time in the Microsoft experts areas on the expo hall floor instead. That’s where the real value is for Ignite.

PASS Summit

I’m known for my willingness to criticize PASS publicly when they’re not doing a good job, but the Summit is really good bang for your buck. If you’re a Microsoft data professional, and you want to go to a big conference, go to the PASS Summit. (It might sound like that’s the only answer – but keep reading.)

SQL Intersection

So if Intersection is smaller, why would you go? Because it’s smaller.

If your biggest conference goal is to bring tough questions to specific experts, and if those experts are on the Intersections presenter list, then you’re going to get more time with them at Intersection. (I’ve had attendees bring Visio diagrams of their infrastructure and we’ve spent 20-30 minutes sketching things out on paper – something I can never do at Summit.) Same thing goes for software vendors – if they’re exhibitors at Intersection, you can spend a lot more time with them asking more detailed questions.

If you’re worried about the smaller conference not having enough sessions you’d wanna attend, check out the schedule. There’s a ton of good stuff on there. (And oh yeah, you can use coupon code OZAR to save $50 when you register, but trust me, I’m not in it for the referral codes, heh.)

Where I’m Going Next

In 2018, if the scheduling works out, I’d also like to get to:

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