Conference News August 2020 | Page 29

29 Sasha Frieze Awarded Event Producer of the Year 2020 by Conference News a week before lockdown, Sasha leads The Business Narrative, a conference and business events agency, bringing a combination of curiosity, creativity and commercial reality to event briefs, spending time getting under the skin of client requirements using the proprietary Event Narrative Framework - seven questions designed to create a coherent narrative communicating your event’s purpose – and a lot of coffee. A Fellow of both the Royal Society of Arts and Chartered Institute of Marketing, Sasha is committed to giving back to her industry as a Mentor for the Fast Forward 15, on the board of the event industry’s Event Apprenticeships Programme and a Visiting Lecturer in Event Management at Westminster University. 6. Talk to production early Hybrid and online events are effectively TV shows. The quality of event production and broadcast impacts how participants experience it, and so it is vital to work with your livestreaming and production team early to ensure the programme you have in mind is deliverable from a production perspective. Start early, and loop in your production professionals to ensure that any challenges are dealt with up front. You’ll also want to consider creating interstitials and idents for slick crossovers between sessions. Branded event studios, where those speakers who are able to travel can record high quality broadcast content are part of all our futures. 7. A strong event host Even more so than physical events, online events need a strong MC to greet and guide people through the event, and we are finding that professionals with broadcast TV experience are skilled at bringing people along. 8. The all-important engagement Enabling participants to engage with each other, speakers and sponsors is one of the ways that your live-online gathering differentiates itself from a series of linked webinars. We are looking at platforms with live Q&A, question upvoting, chat and polls at the side of the broadcast stage, as well as 1:1 video chat and random networking; just like when you meet someone at the coffee station. You could also create themed roundtables and ‘coffee lounges’. There is a vast range of activities that speak to participants ‘authentic selves’: yoga and drink Event Design mixing demos in breaks, competitions, gamification, virtual goodie bags or online scavenger hunts. The list is endless. 9. Sponsorship Virtual sponsor booths, with short video, 1:1 networking, and active lead generation techniques such as downloading white papers, can help sponsors achieve the value they seek, and you may want to enhance this with session content or roundtables. 10. Don’t forget the tech Once you have established your event design, giving you a functionality wish list, you can start selecting your online event platform. Let the event drive the tech. The market is fast-moving, and there are new event platforms coming online, so be prepared to compromise and find one that meets the majority of your needs. You will need to evaluate whether you are looking for an all-in-one platform, or whether you are open to integrating video broadcast, Q&A or other elements. With a lack of clarity from the government on when physical events might open up, virtual event design seems a skill we’re needing to learn fast. www.conference-news.co.uk