My Spring is usually filled with travel. This year because of the “Great Outbreak’ (I used this on Twitter before everyone, once you start to see it everywhere, just know, you and I, will know where it truly came from!) I’m not traveling at all, but I’m still doing a few conferences, virtually.
Virtual conferences have been around for a long time. Almost every organization I know has tried them at least once. Most of these were free events and while most have fairly high numbers organizations go back to the “real’ thing. Most of us tend to not like virtual conferences over the in-person conferences. Why?
I have an opinion that most virtual conferences fail to prosper is because we try and take the in-person experience and we just transfer it to online. Here’s everything we did at the in-person show, now it’s online and just via video. The thing is, an in-person presentation is quite different from an online presentation. It’s one reason so many people hate webinars! It’s just some person talking at you through your speakers with a deck in place of their actual face.
The reality is, these two experiences, in-person vs. virtual are truly two extremely different experiences. Just throwing content up online doesn’t make it the same. In fact, it kind of sucks for most attendees!
So, how could we make virtual conferences better? Big question! One no one has really figured out. We just keep throwing the same garbage up thinking it’s the future of conferences. It’s not, in its current format. Here are some things I think we should be doing to make virtual conferences something people will want to attend and pay for:
– Live interaction with the community attending. One way to make this something people will remember is to get them more involved. I once did a “live” virtual event, which wasn’t really live. My presentation was recorded and then ran at a specific time and date, but I actually went into the chat while I was presenting and started asking questions and responding, etc. The chat blew up and everyone was interacting.
– Live video feed of the presenter, not just the slides. We know people are more likely to watch a live person speak versus just watch a static slide for two minutes while you tell some story or make your point. Virtual conferences need to find out how to put the real person on screen.
– Full professional production. You know what we love, all of us? Watching a well-produced TV show. If I’m running a virtual conference I’m not renting out a hotel ballroom and stage, I’m renting out a production studio and I’m going to make sure I’ve got great sound and lighting, etc. If you want someone to pay $1,000 or $2,000 to attend a virtual event, I better be entertained and it better look and sounds amazing. In the middle of the presentations give me live “anchors” talking about what we just saw and what we are about to see. Bring on a guest to talk shop, etc.
This will cost some money. It will cost way less money than an actual in-person conference, but if you want to make money doing virtual events, you need to up the production value a million times more than it is right now. No one is going to pay you big money to jump on a pseudo-Zoom conference call!
Tim as a producer of over 700 virtual events for our hr community I think I can add value to your comments !
1. Speakers really have to up their game . Cameras on always . More than one voice and audience interaction. Lots of polls and interaction and interactive chat. Virtual event producers need to help presenters but truthfully most show up not prepared and are not the best presenter in a virtual event. Producers also have to add additional functionality to the sessions ie mass chat and the ability for attendees to chat with each other . Even awesome platforms like zoom don’t have this ability which is crazy.
Traditional conference halls are filled with people giving out swag. When attendees stop by your booth the majority just want swag. Virtual events no swag so you immediately drop attendance but the Ones that doesn’t drop by are usually very serious buyers so I would argue we have just eliminated the tire kickers. For the true buyer try to schedule demos in advance …
So let’s me ask all you webcast / virtual event sponsors or speakers … how is your pre event marketing campaigns going ? None existent I bet
All physical events are not created equally and not all virtual events are either . Let’s take this opportunity to improve this experience for everyone.
We are here to help and I know several people interested in moving this entire industry forward not because they have to but because it’s the right thing to do … look for my webcast on exactly this topic this week at hr.com
Ps sorry for the typos on a mobile phone at the vet with our family dog who is the last stages of life
Deb,
Great comments. You are so right from a speaker’s perspective and adding interactions in ways we don’t normally think about!
So sorry for your loss.
T
Thanks Tim . Hope to work with you on the Symphony Talent event and make it spectacular.