5 Tips for Promoting Virtual Events

5 Tips for Promoting Virtual Events

 

Virtual events have been growing in popularity, but the COVID pandemic has really created an environment where they fill an important role – keeping participants safe. Of course, that is only one benefit of virtual events. Others include the ability to reach a wider audience, reduce travel expenses, and lower overall event costs.

The necessity of online events has forced technology to become more accessible but has also crowded the space with events happening daily. This popularity means your events must now find a way to cut through the noise to get participant attention and action.

Here are 5 tips to promote your virtual event to have it stand out:

Know your participant’s goals

For most online events, the goal is to get people to participate in the event and engage with the call to action the event was designed for. Once you know your participants’ goal(s), determine how to promote the event in a way that drives the achievement of that goal. Create a platform that offers testimonials, steps, and inspiration towards obtaining desired results and encourages engagement.

Plan your marketing strategy for building up to the event, to remind participants of the offers during the event, and in post-event follow-up. Continually remind participants of what’s in it for them.

Set Clear Participant Expectations

Be sure potential participants know what to expect from the event. It needs to be of high value in their eyes because unlike a physical event where they invest time and money to sit in a chair, they need details that will get them to engage.

Explain how panels, Q&As, or breakout sessions will work so they know how to interact. Share schedules ahead of time so they understand what they will be getting out of the event, and/or individual sessions.

Participants will feel more satisfied after the event if their expectations are met, so be clear and specific in order to create that for them. Remind the attendees why they signed up and what they will get from the event and do it early and often – then deliver on that.

Promote the event heavily

Use anyone and everyone involved in the event to help promote it. Word of mouth is important here, so make all links and promotional information easy to share. Consider discounts or contests for participants who share the event and increase registration.

Create marketing collateral for speakers, hosts, and even attendees it’s a no-brainer to invite others. Consider your power partners who may want to attend the event and promote it to their customers as well.

Use your event hosts, speakers, and industry influencers to attract participants and help promote the event far and wide.

Virtual events are more successful when cross-promoted, so using strategies that allow for that is ideal. Co-branding, affiliate partnerships, and influencer sharing will help your event have the attendance that will make it successful.

Think bigger

Use segmented lists to speak differently to those attending with different desired outcomes. For example, an event for the writing and publishing industry may attract attendees interested in learning about the craft of writing and others how to get published. These would-be writers.

However, publishing companies may also attend, looking for the next great writer. Editors may attend looking for clients. How you market to each will be different and each segment can be leveraged for different goals while also increasing participation.

Track results

Too often event promoters are busy with details and forget to track how they attracted participants in the first place. If you want to follow up, and/or want to repeat the same or similar event in the future, knowing what worked and what didn’t work will save you time and money.

Set up your events ahead of time to track information – you can review it after the event during debriefing. It will be working the time spent being proactive from the start.

If you are looking for support in creating and managing a virtual event, learn more about how AMI can help, here.

Best Practices for Creating Virtual Events

Best Practices for Creating Virtual Events

 

Recently we have seen events cancel as quickly as dominoes lined up and tipped over. Many of these event organizers, vendors, and venues lost money and likely future business. While in-person events will make a comeback, this pandemic has opened many eyes to the benefits of virtual events.

In fact, with technology in place to allow for remote work and virtual conferences easier than ever, it would not be surprising to see more events be scheduled on a virtual platform. Although virtual events are being conducted in greater numbers lately, so are new problems arising around quality, managing participants, and avoiding hackers.

What are the best practices, then, for creating quality virtual events? Here are our suggestions:

Trust Expertise

Every good event starts with a strategy for success. Virtual events should use professional organizers familiar with running virtual events as their expertise is invaluable. Knowing the right questions to ask and understanding logistics from lessons in hindsight, will help your event go smoothly, even if unforeseen issues arise.

Market Differently but as Much

Branding and marketing your virtual event is just as important as with a live event, but the methods to reach your target audience may differ. Using technology to manage enrollments becomes critical to ensure attendees have everything they need to make the event memorable and successful.

Use Quality Technology

During the event, the platform used to conduct the event must be able to accommodate all the event requirements including webcasting, managing participation, and analytics. Technology is the “event staff” in these meetings, and managing it can be a bit more specialized.

Don’t Skimp

Vendors, entertainment, and affiliates can all still be involved with virtual events, and making this happen smoothly will require advanced planning for seamless integration. Just because the event is virtual, doesn’t mean you have to give up the parts of an event that make it amazing.

Tout the Benefits

Make sure attendees understand the benefits of a virtual event and play those up to increase benefits. These benefits could include:

  • Lower or no travel expense – no need for people to miss work or spend money on hotels, transportation or dining.
  • Global access – reach attendees all over the globe, rather than the shorter reach due to a set geographical destination.
  • Better interaction – technology makes it easier to capture feedback and notes, share information and interact with content and each other.
  • Archival – virtual meetings are easy to record, allowing participants to receive a copy, whether or not they were present.

AMI is a trusted virtual and live events provider offering strategy, planning, and delivery for your next event of any size.

Travel Uncertainty Calls for Virtual Meetings

Travel Uncertainty Calls for Virtual Meetings

According to The New York Times, the Coronavirus is costing businesses billions of dollars. Insurance designed to help businesses when operations stop is limited to those caused by building damage, not viral outbreaks. This means many of these companies who have canceled tradeshows, events, and conferences are taking huge financial loses.

Virus pandemics are never predictable, and being smart and safe must always take precedence, however, a business must still be done. Virtual meetings can be used as a backup measure, or as a standard protocol, to hold global meetings regardless of what’s happening in the world.

When travel uncertainty comes into play, whether from natural disasters, acts of terrorism, viruses, or other global catastrophes, virtual meetings can keep business moving forward, with attendees safely and actively present online.

Creating an Agile Event Strategy

Virtual Meetings and Events are an agile solution for transitioning live events into online ones in order to reduce losses and ensure participation by as many people as possible, regardless of travel restrictions. Virtual Meetings, as part of your event strategy, are a smart solution.

Branded webcast experiences are easier than ever to create with secure, interactive capabilities. Use live, on-demand, or pre-recorded videos to reach a large group for conferences, town hall meetings, company announcements, product launches, sales meetings, and more. Expensive equipment and expertise aren’t required, yet results are professional and TV quality.

Customized Virtual Meetings

Virtual meetings are customized to your requirements for branding and high-quality audio and video streaming capabilities on a variety of devices, anywhere in the world.

Registration and attendance data, audience behavior and engagement and integration with CRM makes virtual meetings more powerful than ever before in reaching attendees. Hundreds of reports are also available to meet team needs.

If business is too important to lose to travel uncertainty, consider how virtual meetings could help mitigate costs while still providing an excellent user experience.

Organizing a Fundraising Gala as a Virtual Event

Organizing a Fundraising Gala as a Virtual Event

 

There are several ways nonprofit organizations use to generate funding. From auctions and raffles to “thing”-athons and galas, nonprofits have learned that open wallets come from the right people having an enjoyable time for a cause. Creative ideas that bring awareness to a cause while also giving a great experience to the donor, is a solid way to generate funds.

Live, in-person events are one-way nonprofits have hosted fundraisers for years, but with online donation platforms, online giving, and mobile gifting on the rise, it may be time to look into organizing a fundraising gala as a virtual event.

Virtual Events Are Cost-Effective

Virtual events have a variety of options that allow for a variety of scenarios such as live webcasting, pre-recorded video, and interactive discussions. Participants can be from all over the world, allowing for a greater reach than what may be possible with a local event.

Virtual Events Build Digital Data

Online registration is available for all meetings, whether in person or not. However, with virtual events, data can be used to track donor demographics, interactions,s and more. Online donation forms, follow-up emails, and even offline communication are possible based on data participants are asked to submit in order to attend the event – for more information than a website form could gather.

Virtual Events Are Flexible

Recently we have seen the importance of having event flexibility in the face of an emergency. Virtual events are able to shift easier if needed, live events, while still offering a great experience. Again, creativity is key here, and professional virtual event organizers know the tricks to make the event successful from a logistics and technology standpoint.

Technology exists to support auctions, guest panels, interviews with program participants/beneficiaries, and more.

How to Make Your Gala Successful

Rally the troops. Not only do you need staff and volunteers to support the gala efforts, but you also want to have an existing base of interested donors to market the event to.

Get an idea of your budget for the event and the expected income you can expect. Use a professional event organizer to help build a budget if it’s your first time. You may consider creating committees to manage:

  • Registration
  • Sponsorships/Affiliates
  • Speakers
  • Auction/Raffles
  • Donations
  • Technology/IT Support

Choose a theme. Make your theme fun and attractive so that attendees will be excited to share it. For example, hosting an “Economic Summit for a Disadvantaged Population” will attract a very different crowd than a “Roast of a Celebrity” event. Be sure you understand your demographic and what would get them inspired to attend.

Market early and often. Just because you don’t have as high of an overhead to cover, doesn’t mean that you should market any less. Leverage the same models that you would at a live event to help promote your virtual gala, such as using table sponsors, vendor sponsorships, on and offline advertising and promotions.

Start with current and past donors, and then use demographical information to get the word out to those who would be most interested in the nonprofit’s cause and mission.

Live and virtual events are a specialty of AMI and our associated vendors. To learn more about making your fundraising gala a success, contact us to learn more about your options and make the best choice for your next event.

Adding Virtual Events to Your Meeting Repertoire

Adding Virtual Events to Your Meeting Repertoire

If you haven’t already incorporated virtual events into your business repertoire, the current COVID-19 pandemic almost certainly has you considering doing so. While right now virtual events may replace live meetings by necessity, you may find that they become an integral part of your business even when in-person events are possible once again.

When done right, virtual events can be a huge asset to your business and increase your audience and reach. Here are some things to keep in mind when deciding how to structure a virtual event:

Choose the right event type

Virtual events come in all different forms, including pre-recorded or live-streamed webinars, virtual conferences, and teleconference-style meetings, among others. Be sure to choose the format that best fits your goals. For example, a pre-recorded webinar or a Livestream video may be very effective for lecture-based events, but will not suffice for an interactive event that requires two-way communication.

Ensure you have adequate technology

Be sure to choose the right platform, and test it before going live with the event. Does your chosen platform allow for two-way communication, if that’s what you need? Is your audio and video equipment sufficient to provide a quality listening and viewing experience for participants?

Use the right collaboration tools

Collaboration tools are a component of technology that will help you work with your team through a centralized information-sharing hub. This includes products like Monday.com, which while not used specifically for virtual events, will help with remote team organization and management leading up to and following the meeting.

Remember to market your event and get creative about alternatives.

Switching your annual conference to a virtual event this year? Make sure your event website and registration forms reflect the changes and answer participants’ questions about what technology is needed on their end. Get creative: do you need a new marketing mechanism to reach your ideal participants? Is there a way to send participants an e-gift rather than the swag bag they would’ve received in person?

Manage expectations

Your electronic meetings will never provide the same intimacy as an in-person event allows. Networking will be more difficult, and less organic. It is important that you keep these constraints in mind and communicate them ahead of time to participants.

Allow for feedback.

Provide a mechanism for participants to tell you what they thought of your event. This will help you move forward with a long-term plan for effectively including more virtual events.

When Disaster Strikes: Leveraging Virtual Meetings

When Disaster Strikes: Leveraging Virtual Meetings

 

One thing that is sure in business is that change will happen. Neither good times nor bad times last forever. In the case of one of our clients in 2003, AMI had to pivot alongside them to make sure their 3-day Advisory Board meeting could continue. For the client, canceling would have meant a delay in bringing an FDA-backed product to market. Delaying would be a huge problem for the Fortune 100 pharmaceutical company.

Sixty high-level executives were making their way or had already checked into their New York City hotel when a major Northeastern US blackout occurred, with anticipated restoration several days out.

An immediate plan needed to be created to avoid losing the $250,000 event investment, plus the unknown yet significant costs associated with a delayed product launch.

AMI had been hired for full-service meeting management including travel coordination and had accounted for and anticipated the chance of an uncontrollable factor coming into play – after all, weather conditions could create a negative impact at any time.

Rather than been going into a downward spiral, AMI contacted venues, airlines, clients, and attendees to manage re-arrangement details. The Four Seasons in Philadelphia was able to accommodate the last-minute change and arranged for ground transportation for the attendees who had already checked in. Luggage was removed from the hotel rooms, even though they were primarily located on or above the 30th floor, without power, and sent with attendees to the new location.

Flights for inbound participants were changed to allow for their arrival in Philadelphia rather than their original NYC airports. Because all the contracts were created with Forc Majeure clauses, our clients were protected from financial penalties on the changes.

The event, while it started bumpy, ended with little further disruption, in an appropriate and comfortable space, allowing the clients to achieve their meeting objectives and meet their launch deadline.

Virtual Meeting Options for Emergencies

The above example demonstrates the ability to be agile in the face of an emergency and keep an event in person. In 2003, the technology doesn’t exist as it does today for large-scale virtual events and conferences. However, moving to a virtual conference in the midst of a power outage also wouldn’t be a viable solution.

That’s why working with professionals who know the industry is so critical.

The bottom line is that in the face of an emergency, meeting planners must have the experience to anticipate and accommodate changes quickly and easily. Most of this happens in the planning stages and is backed by expertise- an invaluable resource in knowing what to do and how.

If you need help with planning an event, whether in-person or virtual, with the backing of contingency plans to prevent the loss of time, money, and resources, contact AMI for more information and to get started.

For more information about Virtual Meetings, contact AMI

By e-mail: virtual@americanmeetings.com Or Call:  866-337-7799 ext. 8877