Schwartz says social media passed the tipping point at 2010 ABA Annual Meeting

Pressure-packed. Exciting. A great responsibility.

This is how Daniel Schwartz described the experience of tweeting under the ABA moniker (@ABAesq) during the 2010 ABA Annual Meeting.

As the official tweeter of the ABA House of Delegates, Schwartz pushed out around 100 tweets over two days during the annual meeting. From a picture of the new executive director to a summary of a resolution in consideration, Schwartz used Twitter to help members follow and understand the meeting’s proceedings.

Twitter and other social media are now integral parts of the annual meeting, Schwartz said.

“We’ve passed the tipping point. I think interest has become enough that if we didn't use it, it would be conspicuously absent,” he said.

Much of the buzz before, during and after the annual meeting took place on Twitter using the meeting hashtag (#abaannual).

“Hashtags have been used in the past, but this was the first meeting that I saw it being used with a great deal of regularity and purpose to it.”

Attendees also used Facebook and Linkedin to update followers on meeting events and find people with similar interests. These social media outlets allowed attendees to “break through the noise” of a large conference attended by 6,000 people, Schwartz said.

“A meeting like that can be very overwhelming. It was easier to meet up with people, easier to coordinate.”

In addition to serving as a member of the ABA House of Delegates, Schwartz sits on the ABA Standing Committee on Technology and Information Systems and is chair of the Litigation Section "Social Media" Subcommittee.

He is an attorney aPullman & Comley LLC in Connecticut and his own social media presence spans Twitter (@danielschwartz), Facebook, Linkedin and his blog, Connecticut Employment Law Blog.

Blogging came easily to Schwartz, having worked as an editor of the Daily Pennsylvanian during his undergraduate years. He will celebrate his 3-year blogging milestone in two weeks and anticipates his blog will hit one million visitors next month.

“The blog has been a perfect fit because I missed that sort of creative writing that journalism allows.”

Schwartz gravitated to Twitter in fall 2008 as a supplement to his blog. He tweets about labor employment issues, Connecticut legal issues, items related to the bar associations and the New York Yankees.

Twitter was also the medium that landed Schwartz an entry in a book by New York Times technology columnist David Pogue. After responding to a question posed by Pogue to his Twitter followers, Schwartz heard back from him and ended up appearing in The World According to Twitter.

Although this was an especially unique experience, Schwartz said social media has given him everyday opportunities that otherwise would not have been possible. These are opportunities for networking and staying connected that lawyers should readily welcome, he said.

“Social media isn’t being used to say what you had for breakfast anymore. It’s being used to convey substance and information. As lawyers, that's what we need.”

Get a Life Conference Presentation on Networking Through the Internet

Kevin just finished up his presentation at the Get a Life Conference on Networking through the Internet: It's Not About Technology.

I followed along on the live video stream and on Twitter to see the commentary. Here's a sampling of the chatter and reaction to the presentation:

ABA TechShow Session on Twitter

Kicking off the ABA TechShow tomorrow will be a panel on Twitter, 'All aTwitter: What's the Buzz about Microblogging?'

Held Thursday morning at 8:30 a.m., the session will be presented by LexBlog's Kevin O'Keefe, e-discovery and legal technology expert Dominic Jaar, blogger and e-discovery consultant Tom Mighell, and Director of the ABA's Legal Technology Resource Center Catherine Sanders Reach.

Kudos to the TechShow board for strategically scheduling this session as one of the first of the conference. This session should increase attendees' awareness of the benefit of following Twitter throughout the conference, as well as inspire them to send out their own Twitter updates.