Day Two in San Francisco
My second day in San Francisco has been nice. I am here for E-Tourism Summit 2008, which is all internet marketing for the travel vertical. I was horrified at the thought of traveling; I haven’t done it for so long. I used to a lot and liked getting to know new cities.
The Google speaker this morning was great. I enjoyed him a lot, and felt smart at the same time because I am doing so many things right. Especially being self taught in SEO/SEM and learning from blogs and my Twitter friends. And I already knew most of the answers the other participants asked the speakers. Nice.
I am traveling with a Mormon coworker. I have successfully avoided questions about “how long” I was with my daughter’s dad, and other “men” I have dated. I have come out as a non-Mormon and she was cool with that. A start.
My quest to find booze should have been easier. My company is VERY Mormon, and I know they would not pay for booze on the company credit card. My traveling companion is putting everything on her corporate AmEx. I thought of ordering room service, but they will only bill the room. Argh!!! So finally I took the advice of @countrogan and just went and got some. Luckily I spotted a liquor store across the street.
San Francisco is a great city. I’ve overcome the bad memories from when I was last here, and wish I could come back with my daughter and enjoy it as a vacation. I will be happy to get home and see my daughter, who is staying with my sister. Sis told me tonight my daughter joined in their daily Book of Mormon readings and didn’t miss a beat.
Ya, better get home sooner than later.
Filed under: gay, Internet, Humor, Lesbian, Place d'employ, Marketing


Well you know, in spite of my less than devout upbringing, I went all gung-ho Mormon for a few years as a teenager. When all your friends are Mormon, it’s easier to play along than to shun the fold. The scary thing is I really did believe it was true for awhile. How the hell does that happen?
My Captcha today is “meat Bluecrest”. Sounds very phallic to me.
I am a small business does this guarantee sales? which that’s really all that matters when you are in business. Some companies charge $500-$40,000 a month for these White label Services. But how many clients does this guarantee. The point is it doesn’t guarantee many at all! In certain instances for particular industries being on the front page matters but, if you don’t have that appeal or a terrible website then you can expect to garner returns on your marketing efforts.
@Prz webdevlopment HUH?