SQL Saturday Baton Rouge 2015
Post date: Jul 14, 2015 3:42:29 AM
SQL Saturday is a global event to bring Information Technology speakers and professionals together for a community-driven, community-attended free day of technical training. The Baton Rouge SQL Saturday 2015 event is produced by the Baton Rouge User Groups, and will be our sixth annual event on campus at LSU. We expect ~600 regional IT professionals and national speakers to join us.
This free conference is open to the public and is perfect for students, database administrators, .NET developers, business intelligence developer, SharePoint admins and developers, IT managers, server admins, network admins, and job-seekers.
Folks with the following skillsets are drawn to SQL Saturday Baton Rouge because of the professional networking, free training, and giveaways:
SQL Server Administrators
Business Intelligence Developers
Data Analysts
ETL Developers
C#/VB.NET Developers
Mobile Developers
Windows Server Admins
SharePoint Architects
SharePoint Developers
Network Administrators
Quality Assurance Analysts
IT Managers
Project Managers
Hiring Managers
Jobseekers of all levels of experience
Students
CIO's
CEO's
We got some great feedback and testimonials, like these actual responses:
“Some very good talks with great content, large community of very smart, talented developers, great networking, and awesome SWAG/goodies”
“Great networking opportunity, good way to get to know the community. Some talks were really excellent presentations on state of the art database techniques.”
“Lots of companies with great networking opportunities; lots of free training and free stuff. High quality and free is very unique.”
“It was a fun way to network and learn about how everyone is using technology that we can bring back to our own organizations. It is a chance to learn something new, and meet new people.”
“My first sql saturday and certainly not my last. Had a very nice time.”
After our hugely successful 2014 event, we sent out an internet survey to all registered attendees. Check out the results of our last, most important question: