
Head over to flickr to see some of the shots we took at BlogHer. Here the triumvirate behind BlogHer -- Lisa Smith, Elisa Camahort, and Jory Des Jardins -- welcome the crowd at the opening session.

Ryanne is well-known in the tight video blog community through her site, Ryanne's Video Blog. She sees videoblogging as a collaborative effort -- a conversation that allows for intimacy between vloggers that includes their audience. Videoblogging, unlike traditional media, allows talkback and commenting. It's a medium in which your true voice can be heard. You make a video. Someone else makes a responsive video. People watching the videoblog get to know you. It's real in a way that traditional media cannot be.
Christine Halvorson, the architect of Stonyfield Farm's four successful blogs, explains at BlogHer how Stonyfield became one of the pioneers of corporate blogging. Stonyfield's CEO took a page from the Dean political campaign, realizing that blogging could give visibility to Stonyfield Farms, just as it had to Dean's campaign. Halvorson's advice: let your PR team do its thing, making sure the world knows about your blog. Stonyfield's public relations efforts put her and Stonyfield on the cover of Business Week magazine and in the Wall Street Journal. Stonyfield's blogs are not directly about the company. They are about subjects of importance to their customers: women's health, raising babies, and getting junk food out of schools. The star of Stonyfield's blogs, The Bovine Bugle, covers organic farming and is written by a real organic farmer.
The issue on the table at the funding session at BlogHer is: Where is the money for women? Panelist Patricia Nakache confirms
the general feeling that women aren't getting funding by throwing out
the statistic that in 2003 only 4.5% of the companies that got venture
funding were owned by women.
Mary Hodder, attorney Denise Howell, and venture capitalist Patricia Nakache lead a discussion on obtaining funding for your business. The panel looks at the process of conventional funding and considers how to use blogging to approach the process in a more unconventional way.
session by asking what people would like to take from the session. Inquiring minds want to know about:
Breaking news - Next week Typepad will include a new feature that will allow bloggers to publish links to others' RSS feeds on their sites, according to Mena Trott, speaking from the audience in the Advanced Tools session at BlogHer.
Halley Suitt of Halley's Comment and Charlene Li of Forrester Research
take on the question: Play by today's rules, or change the game? Lisa
starts us off by stating the issue: 75% of us care about links and
traffic; 25% do not, according to the Blogher survey. The problem is
that women bloggers are not showing up in search results. We are not
A-list bloggers. It's rare for us to be in conferences where women are
50% of the speakers. Do we have a problem, or don't we care?
BlogHer begins with a welcome by Elisa Camahort, Jory Des Jardins,
Purvi Shah, Lisa Stone & Katrin Verclas. and a slide show of the
attendees responses to the preconference survey. Here's what the
figures tell us. 80% of attendees are women and 20% men. Of these 15%
are newbies. More than half are outside the Bay area -- some from
London, Portugal, and other international locations. 52% have never
attended a conference. 30% came mostly to meet other bloggers; 15%
primarily came to learn. This is a do-acracy, a discussion. The
attendees are expected and encouraged to create the content. Let's do
it!