Conference & Meetings World Issue 118 | Page 29

Virtual Conferences

allows participants to focus on their areas of interest but also opens these sessions to people who might otherwise struggle to participate , such as single parents or women who are juggling career and young children . Again , in the traditional in-person model , such sessions would never have been made available on-demand and as such would have remained out of reach to many people .
From unintended to intentional outcomes To date , many of the benefits of virtual – accessibility , reduced carbon footprint , reduced financial burdens and less interruption – have been unintended consequences of the Covid-19 requirements . To truly move forward and ensure greater involvement , these need to become intentional objectives .
What , though , would conferences that are intentionally seeking to open up to a wider audience look like ? How do you actually go out and target those who wouldn ’ t come in normal circumstances ? Does that mean
having differential pricing , such as reduced rates for attendees from developing nations ? Furthermore , should you be considering how relevant your content is for all participants ?
For example , if you are actively seeking to attract participants from developing countries , you might need to think about the relevance of content that talks about expensive , state-of-the-art medical technology to treat certain conditions . Instead , your sessions need to include content that has more relevance to the occasional user or to those who are not going to have access to expensive equipment .
There is growing evidence that conference organisers are at least considering alternative tracks , such as a junior ’ s day before the start of the main conference or a basic techniques day that covers essential surgical techniques rather than the latest cutting-edge developments . The point is , don ’ t aim your content at just the most experienced specialists in developed nations that have access to the latest technologies . Consider what
“ It means people who would previously not have been able to attend are joining conferences and benefitting from the information shared .”
skills and techniques are needed when resources are limited and build sessions around that .
Time and language barriers There are two other important considerations if you are seeking to expand the reach of your virtual conferences : time zones and language .
We ran a meeting recently on behalf of the Australian faculty that touched 90 countries across multiple time zones . In these situations , you need to start thinking about running sessions across three time zones and making sure sessions are advertised accordingly . For example , you might have a meeting that people in the Asia Pacific and US Eastern states can ’ t attend and another that people in Europe and Asia Pacific can attend .
Another huge consideration is language . If you ’ re only running sessions in English , you ’ re restricting access to those comfortable learning in English and completely ignoring the large percentage of people who speak basic or no English at all . There are more examples of people running conferences in more than one language but typically it tends to be English and Spanish or French and German .
We have delivered sessions in nine languages simultaneously , so we know it ’ s very doable . It does cost more and it ’ s more complex , but if you start with the principle that you want to educate the world , then it ’ s something you ’ ve got to do . There are many tools out there that allow you to offer more language options , you must make that investment and take the time to broaden your reach .
Virtual sessions are helping to break down barriers and enabling greater access to knowledge in multiple fields . If conference organisers want to truly break down barriers , they need to consider their sessions , their pricing and their audience when designing their conferences .
ISSUE 118 / CONFERENCE & MEETINGS WORLD / 29