The OxTweetup
The Tweetup in Oxfordshire went well the other night. There were people from all over Oxfordshire and from around outside areas like Newbury. I arrived a bit late, so got there just in time for "Monday Night is Pie Night" (how can an American not attend that?) and spoke with some complete strangers.
There must have been about 50 people there. The demographic was mostly white and middle-aged and more affluent. Watching the local tweets, I know that Twitter is a big thing with younger secondary school kids. But this was not their scene.
The tweetup took place at a very nice restaurant called the Fallowfields Country House. From what I gather, the owner, Anthony Lloyd, is very big into technology and twitter. He blogs, tweets, and his restaurant has a nice website. He is definitely using this social networking trend very skilfully. I think his use of Twitter and blogging actually brings a lot of people to his fancy restaurant that would not travel out into this village regularly. I, being primarily a burger guy, would not have entered such a posh looking place on my own, but will probably bring the family back to to this place often. I didn’t get much time to talk to Anthony, but he set up a nice evening and has a beautiful restaurant.
I showed up a bit late to the Tweetup. I was working later than I had hoped I would be, so I arrived at the tail end of the networking portion of the evening.
The natural wall-flower in me fought to take over, but I took a deep breath and jumped into a group of people having a conversation. This is always difficult. At networking-type events, like seminars and stuff, there are usually clusters of people standing around and it always looks like half of the people already know each other (they don't— they are just better at introducing themselves than I am), so you don't really want to butt into a conversation. But the alternative is to stand and pretend to be reading stuff on your phone. So I jumped in there, "Hi, I'm Eric Wroolie. I'm going to pretend I've been standing in your group the whole time and maybe no one will notice." The conversation always goes to my accent— and that gives me something to talk about. “Why would you move to move out here?” “You’re not Canadian are you?” “Well, you haven’t lost your accent at all.” When asked what I do, I tell them I'm a software developer (although I've read enough to know I need an elevator pitch for this moment --“I work with small to medium-sized companies helping them with outsourcing software development” — but it's too hokey and I won't do it).
I met one dentist who is using social networking to bring in more business and it seems to be working for him. I met a guy who told me he was a trainer, and since I used to work at Sea World as a kid— I assumed he meant animal trainer, but he assured me he taught sales training and presentation skills. And, of course at this kind of event, I met other software people.
I sat down at a table with people who all knew each other. They were members of BNI— a British networking group. I attended a BNI breakfast meeting years ago, and was sure they were going to try to persuade me to attend another one. I got the impression they attended a lot of these things all over the southwest. But most of the people I met weren't career networkers, so it wasn’t so bad.
It was a nice evening. The pie was fantastic. I met some nice people. Not one business card was exchanged—so it felt lower on the sleazy factor. If you have a tweetup in your area, it might be worth considering attending.
Related posts:
- Attending a Tweetup tomorrow
- What Twitter is becoming
- Some thoughts on Facebook vs Twitter
- The New Blog (and why you need one)
- Healthy Skepticism about the net
About Eric Wroolie

Eric Wroolie is a software developer specialising in project Outsourcing and Offshoring.
As a software developer since 1998, he has built applications for Barclays Capital, BBC, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank and Omega Logic.
In 2004, he founded Overpass, a company that provides offshoring services to UK and US organisations.
He is a San Diego native who has spent the last 10 years living in England and working in London.
Eric speaks Chinese Mandarin and served in the US Army as a Mandarin and Vietnamese linguist.
In addition to being able to speak Mandarin, Eric can juggle three balls for almost twenty seconds, and make fart noises using his hands only (this is more difficult than it sounds-- try it).
Eric has an MCSD in Visual Basic 6 and previous languages, but now works with .Net. He holds ScrumMaster Certification with Scrum Alliance.
Eric on Twitter
- I'm sitting in a softly area in Abingdon trying to get some work done in some stifling heat. 4 days ago
- I'm becoming a Twitter wall flower. Always reading and never writing 4 days ago
- Weather is clearing up. 2 weeks ago
- Just finished reading "Predicably Irrational" by Dan Ariely. It's one of the best books I've read in a long time! 2 weeks ago
- New Overpass Post: Is C# uncool? - I’ve been a Microsoft developer since 1998. Back then I was working in a bank—so ... http://ow.ly/1822TF 3 weeks ago
- More updates...
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