Hello, Precious.
How do you run a virtual program that has personality, joy, heart, humor, character, spirit, soul, magic?
Can a virtual event be better than a physical, in-person event?
Last Tuesday, I would have answered... I hope so (to the first question). And no (to the second)—not really, anyway.
Maybe I was just exhausted. (Aren't we all.)
Maybe I was just uninspired. (Same.)
Maybe it's just been *A WEEK*.
Then last Wednesday and Thursday we at MarketingProfs hosted our annual B2B Forum online, for the first time ever. And we realized a few things about how virtual events can be better than in-person. At least... in some ways.
Here are some thoughts inspired by last week's B2B Forum. My colleague Jen Smith is publishing a piece that echoes some of these ideas and introduces others. Look for a link to that next time. Even if you don't run full-blown events, our advice applies to any online meeting, training, or other program you might be running in these Covid times.
Produce a play, not a movie.
The biggest mistake I see a lot of us making is that we try to control the virtual-event attendee experience a little too tightly.
We prerecord all the sessions, the intros, the outros, even the Q&A.
We obsess over the tech.
We forget that events are fundamentally about creating a shared experience with others.
We forget that ultimately we are creating a sense of you-had-to-be-there, a tension that something unexpected could happen.
It's the difference between a live performance and a Netflix special.
I get it. Tech is iffy sometimes. Platforms can fail. No one wants tech to whiff, ruin the experience for everyone, damage the brand. Prerecording isn't bad. But when we don't leave room for magic to happen... it won't.
The solution is to build in unexpected moments and triggers to action... and then get out of the way.
▶️ Create a trigger to action. Prerecorded on-demand sessions are awesome, because everyone can watch what they want! Whenever they want! On their own time!
But guess what? No one will.
They mean to, sure. But we're all pulled into meetings and Zoomschooling kids and house-training new puppies...
And then, come night, if it's a choice between The Queen's Gambit and your prerecorded session on ABM? Well, I love you, Marketing. But CHECK. MATE.
C.C. Chapman and I wrote in
Content Rules about how any content needs a trigger to inspire action. So it is for virtual events, too.
What's that mean for live events? Run prerecorded sessions as live Watch Parties with Live Chat, with the speaker in attendance, chatting along with the audience, and turning on the camera at the start to say hello and the end to answer questions.
And whatever you do, don't pretend a prerecorded session is live.
Benefits to this approach: It creates a trigger to watch the session live. It helps the audience form a connection to (and with) the speaker. And it helps the speaker see what resonates, what doesn't, what needs more explanation... based on real-time audience feedback.