I always seem to get a question or two along the lines of “What’s it like on a SQLCruise?” as I present at various conferences, SQL Saturdays, and user group meetings. Since we just finished up the 2013 Miami SQLCruise, I thought it’d be a good time to recap so that you can judge for yourself if you’d ever want to do it yourself. Personally, I think that Tim Ford (Twitter | Blog), together with his wife Amy, are doing better than ever in making the cruise both a top-quality learning experience and fantastic social experience. I’ve heard from many attendees that they learned enough in the first day or two to make the whole trip worthwhile and, keep in mind, some of these attendees paid for the trip out of their own pocket.
Update 05-Feb-2013 at 7:22 PM: Loads of pictures at http://sqlcruise.com/cruise/past-cruises/sql-cruise-caribbean-2013/.
SQLCruise Content
SQLCruise is, first and foremost, a training event. On each cruise, Tim usually pulls together four or five very well known experts in the industry who, in turn present several hours training. Each day the ship is at sea is a day spent in class. Example of the agenda is on the lower right. When the ship is in port, it’s a day of activity and adventures. Tim spends quite a bit of time coordinating with the speakers so that the curriculum is both unique and well tailored to the students.
But each and every night, whether at sea or in port, is spent in ‘office hours’. For many attendees, office hours are their favorite part of the learning experience. Since Tim caps registration at 15 students, that means the students get virtually unfettered access to the experts. If you’ve ever attended a conference, you’ve probably encountered that common scenario where the speakers are busy with presentations and, at the conclusion of their session, are mobbed by attendees with questions. They’re lucky to get 3-4 minutes of the speaker’s time. On the other hand, the students get hours and hours to talk about whatever is on their mind. And since we’re on a cruise ship in the tropics, office hours usually look like the image at top right. It’s both very relaxing and very educational.
Another aspect of the content on SQLCruise that makes it unique is the amount of time spent on personal and professional development. The majority of attendees are not newbies. They’re mid-career professionals who are doing well and their career and want to take it to a higher level. But as we often find, our earlier years in IT are spent learning how to be really good at the technology part of our career. We like technology and, sensibly, it’s the immediate problem we face in day-to-day productivity. But as the years progress and we earn a few promotions, we come to find that rising in the ranks means a lot of communication and, gasp, office politics. The speakers, in many cases, have careers the students would like to emulate. This is where SQLCruise really shines. Imagine being able to pick the brains of senior technologists and managers in a friendly and welcoming environment. How great is that? In fact, many SQLCruise attendees (I know of several from each cruise I have attended) have used the professional counseling they received on the cruise to enact an energetic new phase in their career with big pay raises, exciting new jobs, high-profile blogs, and all sorts of other really cool things like that.
You’ll have to suffer through excursions like Trunk Bay on St. John’s in the US Virgin Islands.
SQLCruise Experience
Now that I’ve told you about the grueling educational side of SQLCruise, did I mention that we do all of this ON A CRUISE SHIP IN THE CARIBBEAN?!? The cruise ships are, if you will, an enormous Vegas hotel on the water. There are casinos, a constant parade of entertainment, live music, comedy, pools and water slides, discos and dancing, live game shows – the works. Ask Neil Hambly (Twitter | Blog) about the dancing!
SQLCruise Cost
It’s a great event and a great way to spend a week. I hope to see you at a future SQLCruise!
-Kev
You are wonderful. Thank you so much for writing such an amazing post. We are so blessed to have you as part of our SQLCruise family. Thank you for everything.