Transitioning to Virtual and Hybrid Events. Ben Chodor

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them to continue to get similar programming through your TV channel 24/7 and 365 days a year.

       Use Cases

      Internal Communications – There is no better way to have a meeting than via a web conferencing tool; the keys are the ability to see and hear all the participants, screen sharing, and text chatting. It allows a geographically dispersed group the ability to feel closer and go over important matters, share information, or just have a team meeting or daily or weekly update. It is what the conference call used to be. During COVID‐19 the use of web conferences went from something a lot of organizations used to one that now virtually everyone uses. Zoom changed how the world looked at web conferencing; they made it easy to use and very accessible for anyone. We have all been invited to Zoom happy hours, birthdays, and workout classes. One of my favorite parts is that you can access Zoom from any device and that I get to see and hear whomever I am engaging with.

      Sales – To me this is one of the best use cases. It gives you the ability to see and hear your customers and prospects and it's the ideal way to share your slides, your screen, and demo your products and solutions right from your computer. It also can be scheduled but does not have to be; in other words you can just send out your custom link and anyone globally can log instantly on, and in a matter of minutes.

      One of my goals in this book is to give you the tools you need to make the shift to virtual and hybrid events, but it's also to take away some of the fear you have in making this transition. Trust me, you will make a few mistakes along the way, but as long as you are creating content that is high quality and engaging, the rest will be easy. I have also said before, one of the best parts of virtual events is no one has created the perfect mousetrap yet. I have produced and been part of thousands of events; I have made more mistakes and miscalculations than I can even remember, and I have helped create some of the best innovations and worked on some of coolest and most engaging events as well. So, for all we know it's going to be one of you reading this book who creates the next great virtual event innovation.

      Take a deep breath and ask yourself these questions. After you've answered them, all the support information on what you should do next you'll find in chapters throughout the book.

       What are your goals of the program?It could be attendance sizeIt could be number of engagementsIt could be the time an attendee spends inside the virtual eventIt could be the number of sessions or programs that the attendee watchesIt could be the number of booths each attendee visitsIt could be the number of qualified sales leads that you or your sponsors getIs it brand recognition for your company or organization?Is it about accreditations and learning?

       What is the ROI (return on investment) you're looking for?Is it revenue from registrations?Is it the revenue from exhibit booths sold?Is it how many demonstrations your team can give during the days of the virtual event?Is it the revenue from sponsorships?Is it increasing membership?Is it to increase your visibility?Is it education related, in other words the number of certifications achieved?Is it public relations related, the number of stories written about your events and sponsors?

       How important is interaction?Is it the number of one‐on‐one interactions?Do you want the audience to answer polls?Do you want to test new products and offerings on your audience?Do you want to have gamification and contests? (I will cover this in greater detail later in the book.)Is it important for the attendees to interact with each other?

       How important is video?Will your presentation be live video or prerecorded?Will you enable your sponsors or exhibitors to add videos?Will you create an event‐opening video?Will you have your speakers present via their webcam, or will you send a video crew to their home or office, or will you have them go to a local studio, or will it be a combination?Will you want the ability to have multiple presenters from different locations on the screen at the same time?

       How important is two‐way video?For your breakout roomsFor your classroom programsFor media interviewsIn your exhibitor's boothIs it important to have the audience show their video when they ask questions during sessions?

       How important is your support material?SlidesProduct demosHandouts for your presentationsWhitepapersScreen sharing for breakout room presentations

       What types of presentations will you have?General sessionsKeynote sessionsBreakout sessionsTraining sessionsFireside chats sessionsWill the presentation be live with question‐and‐answer periods?Will the presentation be simulated live with Q&A periods?Will the presentation be prerecorded or a combination of live, simulated live, and prerecorded?Will any of your presentations be audio and slides, or will it be video and slides, or will it be a combination of audio and video programs? (I am a big fan of video programs whenever possible. It not only gives your audience the ability to hear what the presenter is saying, it allows the audience to see the presenter's facial expressions and it makes it easier to engage with the presenter.)

       How important is polling and/or surveying your audience?You have a unique opportunity to keep your audience involved in the program and not just voyeurs with polling and audience surveys.Instant feedback may or may not be important to you, but it's something you need to plan for before the program begins.

       Will you be having certifications or continuing education programs for credits?A lot of virtual events for associations, legal, healthcare, technology, and accounting organizations include the ability to earn continuing education credits. This could also be a good way to increase revenue as well.You could also look into partnering with accreditation organizations.

       Will you have multiple sessions at the same time?How many sessions will you want to be running at the same time?One of the benefits of a virtual event or hybrid event is that the audience member can watch one session live and then go back and watch the other sessions at their leisure on‐demand after the program is over. Remember you need to spend a lot of time planning and scheduling sessions, so make sure you don't take on too much for your first virtual event.If you have multiple sessions, make sure you make the agenda available before the virtual event begins and make sure you use a platform that allows the attendees to create their agenda in advance and save the session dates and times.

       Where do you want your program to live after it is over?Will you keep the virtual event open? (Most platforms give you one year of access.)Will you download your sessions and put them in your own content management system (CMS) or learning management system (LMS)?Will you continue to add live and on‐demand content to your virtual event platform after the program is over?

       How important

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