Getting to a Great Abstract

Published on December 5, 2024

A 30 minute collaborative exercise ending up in a worthwhile short abstract for your idea.

An abstract, here, is short text suitable for submitting to an event. It's longer than a few sentences, shorter than an article – say 300 words if you like, or 2-3 mins reading – and should help the reader judge whether they would put your idea in front of their audience at their event. It's not about you (unless your idea for a talk is about you).

Process

  • Have a chat about your idea (you need one) and existing abstract (if you have one)
  • Prime your mind with a couple of checklists or our gallery of fantasy abstracts (to follow), or by searching for help with abstracts or (careful) searching for other abstracts in that area.
  • Write something down!
  • Ask for review, comments, advice
  • (optional) Add your abstract to the gallery and ask for public comments
  • Set milestones for next steps

Facilitators: be part of chats, if invited. Have things to add to the checklists. Be ready to advise if asked, or to show one of your own abstracts / tell a story of your own. Set up (if possible) accountability partners for the milestones.


Great abstract

  • catchy title
  • idea that has potential
  • indicates that thought and work has gone into communicating the message
  • /brief/ problem statement
  • real examples
  • demonstrates experience
  • clear takeaways
  • relevant to event
  • easy to read, draws you onwards
  • non-trivial
  • has substance – more than a tease, less than a paper
  • more than just the bright side – pitfalls, failures, antipatterns, pathologies
  • within word limit (and more than a couple of sentences)
  • offers interaction or demonstration

Poor abstract

  • claims expertise / authority
  • problem excludes content
  • poorly written, poorly proofread
  • unstructured or incoherent
  • buzzwords
  • single tool
  • happy paths only
  • One true method / "I'm right"
  • Emotionless
  • Tired topic
  • Typical AI tropes