HIStalk
Inside Healthcare
Computing has graciously agreed to make previous Mr. HIStalk editorials
available from its newsletter as a weekly “Best Of”
series for HIStalk. This editorial originally appeared in the
newsletter in February 2007. Inside Healthcare Computing subscribers
receive a new editorial every week in their Electronic Update.
Punxsutawney Phil aside, you know spring is at hand when it’s
time for HIMSS (already?) For those of us who go, it seems like the
entire healthcare IT industry is there, most of them angrily checking
their watches in the Starbuck’s line or barking
self-important cell phone commands to their holding-down-the-fort
underlings back home.
If you’re not going, don’t feel bad. It’s
a great time to get work done without being interrupted, much like the
dead week between Christmas and New Year’s. Or, if your boss
will be there and you’re so inclined, to screw off with
little fear of detection.
Everyone heads for HIMSS with a firm agenda, pledging this year to get
serious work done instead of wasting time like at the previous ten
conferences. Demos will be dutifully studied, job-related networking
will be pursued, and vendor relationships will be cultivated for the
benefit of the employer picking up the tab. You’re here to
work. Or, so the rationalizing goes.
All those worthy goals evaporate once the first heady breath of
conference air is inhaled deeply, that energizing tang of carpet
cleaner, coffee, collateral, and cologne that puts you in conference
mode. Like a recovering alcoholic vowing to take just one sip of beer,
you’re off the wagon. Before you know it, your agenda looks
more like this:
- Plan shopping, golf, or spa time from the tourist
literature left in your hotel room.
- Find someone before or during the opening reception who
might give you a drink ticket they don’t need.
- Walk the halls trolling for people you know, encouraging a
hearty greeting and keen interest about what you’ve been up
to, then silently cursing the arrogant jerks when they pass by with a
vacant stare.
- Look soulfully into the eyes of vendor booth people and
speak profoundly and positively about whatever they’re
selling, hoping they’ll dig deep under the counter to
furtively slip you an invitation to a really cool party
that’s not open to the masses.
- Expect profuse chumminess from booth people who pretend to
remember you and harbor no ill will from that time you cut their
product from the shortlist.
- Decide just how much honesty everyone else applies when
completing their CE forms, figuring that walking outside an auditorium
door and catching a couple of words should be worth the full CE credit.
- Blame the speaker’s boring delivery when you
decide to bag their talk 15 minutes in, climbing fearlessly over the
entire row of knees, in front of the projector, and against the tide of
incomers and door-standers, figuring no one knows you anyway.
- Check the agenda and decide to sleep in, leave the
afternoon sessions early, and maybe sit out in the sun at lunch.
- Thrust your chest out proudly, knowing that booth people
will pretend to be impressed with your title, your employer, and your
town, even though they are silently sniggering at all three and looking
over your shoulder for a better prospect or an incognito competitor who
might hire them.
- Cruise the perimeter of the larger booths, trying to catch
the eye of someone who looks like a doctor, executive, or hot rep,
steering a wide berth around low-ranking losers who earned a HIMSS trip
for some geeky company accomplishment like programming.
- Gather lots of vendor material for take-home study, then
chuck it all in your room’s trash can before you leave for
the airport.
- Having already planned to skip the Thursday sessions since
everyone else does, call the airline on Wednesday afternoon to see if
you can get out earlier.
- Wear your Mardi Gras beads home, bring your kids crappy
booth junk, and impress the spouse with fake doubloons and a box of
Café Du Monde beignet mix purchased at the airport.
Have a safe trip to New Orleans.
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