Shopping for event management tools: How to get internal buy-in when you’re considering a move

  • Event Management
  • Event Trends
Getting buy-in for event management tools

Getting buy-in from the executive team for new technology, like event management tools, can be challenging. Plus, you won’t be the only one using it. So how do you get your co-workers on board for change, too? Even if your existing processes are broken, people tend to want to stay with the devil they know vs making a change. But there are strategies you can use to increase your chances of success. 

Here are some steps you can take to get you closer to getting buy-in from stakeholders:

Write a compelling business case

Before approaching stakeholders, you need to have a clear understanding of the benefits the new technology system will bring to the organization as a whole. Identify the key pain points that the technology will solve for different users in your organization. Try to quantify the benefits in terms of time saved, cost reduction, increased revenue, and/or improved customer satisfaction.

Creating a compelling business case is crucial to getting buy-in for new technology, as it helps decision-makers understand the benefits and ROI of the new tool.

Here are some steps to create a compelling business case for a new event management tool:

1. Identify the problems

Start by identifying the problems that the new event management tool could address, ideally beyond just your own issues you’re struggling with. This could be a pain point within the organization like the:

  • Need to improve efficiencies when creating and managing events across multiple teams
  • Desire to lower the cost per event
  • Need for a more professional-looking and branded experience for potential attendees
  • Opportunity to reach new audiences

2. Describe the solution

Once you have identified the problems, describe how the new technology solution will address them. Be specific about the features and benefits of the technology and how it will help solve the company’s problems and/or capture new opportunities.

3. Identify the stakeholders

Identify the stakeholders who will be impacted by the new technology, including executives, other employees and teams, customers, and partners. Describe how the event management tools will benefit each stakeholder group and how it would compare to what you’re doing now to manage events.

4. Estimate the costs

Estimate the costs of implementing the new technology, including hardware, software, training, and support. Be as detailed as possible without spending too much time on demos and sales calls until you get buy-in. Also, consider the total cost of ownership over time. A range of potential costs is usually enough for the ultimate decision-maker to give you the green light to continue researching new event management tools (or the red light to stay with the status quo).

5. Estimate the benefits

If you can, try to estimate the benefits of the new technology. Think about potential increased revenue, cost savings, improved efficiencies, and/or improved customer experience. Use data and analytics to support your estimates if you can. This can be time-consuming, so many people give anecdotal insights as a first pass and then dig deeper upon request from upper management.

6. Calculate the ROI

Calculate the return on investment (ROI) of the new technology investment, taking into account the estimated costs and benefits. Make sure to show how the ROI aligns with the organization’s financial goals and objectives. Again, rough numbers can point decision-makers in the right direction. Just be sure to document how you arrived at your numbers particularly if they are rough estimates, so expectations are set appropriately.

7. Develop a risk assessment

Develop a risk assessment that identifies potential risks and challenges associated with the new technology investment, and a mitigation plan to address them. You may want to ask a few of your colleagues who may also be touched by the new tool what potential risks they perceive as well. The more you involve others in your initial planning, the more likely you are to get them on board with change.

8. Present the business case

Present the business case to decision-makers, using data and analytics to support your arguments where possible and always share how you arrived at any estimates. Be clear, concise, and persuasive, and be prepared to answer any questions or concerns that decision-makers may have.

By following these steps, you’ll show your company that you’ve put the necessary time, thought and research into why you need new event management tools and processes.  You’ll be able to create a compelling business case for tools within an event management platform that will increase the chances of getting buy-in from decision-makers. Remember to focus on the benefits and ROI of the investment. Also, think about how it will help the organization achieve its goals and objectives. 

5 bonus tips to help you get to YES

While the steps above will help you write a compelling business case for a new event management tool, there are some additional tips that can help you get closer to a “yes”! Here are five bonus tips to help you get there:

Know your audience

Different members of the executive team and other teams within your organization will have different priorities and concerns. When presenting your case for the new technology system, tailor your message to the concerns of each team member. For example, the CFO may be more interested in cost savings, while the CMO may be more focused on improving customer experience. Your technology team will be most concerned about how long it will take to implement and what resources you’ll need from them. Everyone will be concerned about data security.

Communicate the long-term benefits

When presenting your case, make sure to communicate the long-term benefits of the new technology. This can include how it will help the organization stay competitive, improve efficiencies across multiple teams and save time in general, plus support revenue growth with simple registration processes and secure payment processing. Everyone wants to hear that their jobs will be easier with new tools and processes. A new event management tool is no exception.

Know what you are competing against

As you know, organizations make many of their internal decisions based on budget. Knowing the budget available and understanding other potential priorities can help you prepare for objections related to other expenses. Whether it is new technology for other departments or different expenses – having this understanding will put you ahead of the game when presenting your proposal. Remember, the more you can show long-term cost savings and improved ROI, the better your chances are of getting the budget.

Get support from key individuals

Identify key individuals within the organization who will benefit from the new technology and get their support. This can include department heads, project managers, or team leads. Having their support can help you make a stronger case to the executive team. 

Develop a strong implementation plan

The executive team will want to know how the new event management tool will be implemented, what the timeline will be, and what resources will be required. Develop a detailed implementation plan that outlines these details. Be prepared to answer any questions or concerns the executive team may have. A quick glance at some of your potential event management tools will give you an idea of:

  • Who has complicated and costly implementation processes
  • Which are DIY
  • Which can get you up and running quickly and easily with limited-to-no additional implementation fees

Conclusion

Getting buy-in from the executive team for new technology and event management tools requires a strategic approach that addresses their concerns and focuses on the long-term benefits for the organization.

Writing a compelling business case is an important step to support buy-in. It helps to clarify the need for the investment, provides a clear justification for the investment, enables informed decision-making, helps to allocate resources effectively, and facilitates communication and collaboration.

If you’re considering new event management tools for your organization, talk to our team to see if Attendease can help. If so, we are happy to support you with whatever you need to get buy-in from your internal stakeholders. 

5 Reasons It Might Be Time to Change Your Virtual Event Management Platform

  • Event Management
  • Event Trends
virtual event management platform attendee experience

Your virtual event management platform is at the heart of creating amazing experiences. With the rapid development of new technology, event planners and organizations need to stay up to date with the latest advancements to ensure the best possible experience for your attendees. So naturally it’s important to continually evaluate whether your current platform can provide the functionality needed for hosting successful virtual events—both today and into the future.

In this blog, we’ll explore five key reasons why it may be time for you to consider switching to a new virtual event management platform.

1.   Your current virtual event management platform is outdated

In the past several years, virtual events have undergone significant changes. Developers shifted their focus to virtual event platforms in response to the pandemic and, in its wake, the tools available for hosting virtual events are more advanced than ever.

If you invested in a platform prior to the pandemic and it hasn’t kept up with the changing needs of the industry—or if your platform received half-measure, bolt-on features throughout to try and compensate—you may be at a disadvantage. Many of the original webinar platforms have not evolved into true virtual event platforms and are still only suitable for hosting basic webinars. Even with a “basic” webinar these days, attendees expect more than they did pre-pandemic.

Evolved platforms provide streamlined, seamless virtual event experiences from end-to-end and have been developed with today’s industry in mind.

2.   Attendees have come to expect first-class virtual or hybrid events, and won’t accept anything less

During the pandemic, organizations quickly discovered the benefits of transitioning to virtual events. In fact, 84% of organizations who ran virtual events during the pandemic stated they spent less than in-person events prior! 

With more organizations making the switch and having extra room in their budget to innovate and push the boundaries of virtual events, expectations have increased for both attendee experiences and the virtual event platforms that provide them. The landscape is constantly changing.

With fierce competition in the virtual event management platform industry, some companies are working hard to create tools that stand out from the rest and address everyone’s pain points. However, other legacy platforms continue to rest on their laurels even though they may not offer all the features and functionality that people need, all because it can be difficult for organizations to adopt and integrate new technology.

The reality is that people on all sides—from your team to your attendees—now expect an elevated experience. This includes an easy-to-build and easy-to-navigate event website, professional marketing tools and automation, and a seamless ticketing experience

3.   Your platform might not be as secure as it needs to be

When it comes to hosting virtual events, the security of your platform should be a top consideration.

Many modern virtual events management platforms allow you to require registration prior to an event and have security measures to ensure only those users attend an event when the time comes. Registration enables the host to have an accurate attendee list and control who can (and cannot) attend. As an added benefit, it also allows for better planning and organization of the event. By being able to restrict the event to only authenticated users, you can prevent unauthorized access and allow only individuals with login credentials or pre-approved access to attend.

Security measures often extend into the event environment itself via passcodes and waiting rooms. By setting a passcode, the host can prevent uninvited individuals from joining the event. Waiting rooms are yet another useful security measure that allow a host to vet attendees before admitting them into the event. These are particularly useful for large events where it may be challenging to monitor all attendees effectively.

By selecting a platform with these security features, you’ll have peace of mind knowing that your virtual event is safe and protected from potential disruptions or unauthorized access.

4.   Your platform might not follow accessibility best practices

If you’re considering shopping for a new virtual event management platform, it’s important to consider the accessibility needs of your attendees. Audio descriptions, captions, and transcripts are three aids often featured in modern platforms that can greatly improve the experience of attendees with hearing or visual impairments during your event.

Captioning is an important accessibility feature that provides verbatim written text of your event in real-time. Offering a similar functionality to subtitles in film and television is crucial for attendees who are deaf or hard of hearing. They can also be helpful for non-native speakers or in noisy environments!

For attendees who’d like to read your content after the event vs. watching live, transcripts are another great accessibility feature. They allow attendees to take part in your event at any time.

Accessibility features should not only be limited to people with hearing loss, however. Your next virtual event management platform needs to also accommodate attendees who are blind or have low vision. For these attendees, audio descriptions can provide narrations that describe crucial visual details in a video. This allows everyone to feel they are a part of your next inclusive event.

5.   Your attendee engagement tools might be outdated

Engagement tools are a crucial piece of a modern virtual event. They enhance audience participation, interaction, and overall experience, making virtual events more engaging and effective. On the flipside, outdated tools can result in disinterested attendees who may complain about your event or not return for future ones.

Offering a fully branded experience from end-to-end, today’s virtual event management platforms are built to wow attendees at every turn. Older platforms may have a few basic tools to engage your audience. You’ll find it’s easier to build excitement and drive engagement when your event offers streamlined tools like 1:1 Chat, Polling, Q&A, and Lucky Draw features to keep your audience active.

Conclusion

A modern virtual event management platform is essential for delivering epic meeting and event experiences over and over again. If your current platform is outdated, lacks comprehensive security measures, fails to meet the latest accessibility requirements, is missing up-to-date tools for audience engagement, or doesn’t meet attendees’ first class expectations, your organization could be missing out on crucial features that elevates event experiences from “meh” to “wow”! 

If you’re considering a new platform, look no further than EventUp Planner (formerly Attendease).

EventUp Planner helps you deliver modern, exciting virtual event experiences with all the security and accessibility features your organization needs.

You’ll be able to:

  • Host single or multi-session virtual events
  • Choose between live, pre-recorded, or on-demand sessions
  • Provide a seamless attendee experience using the fully integrated EventUp Planner Virtual Studio
  • Deliver branded online sessions with fully featured set up and in-session tools

Book a call today and discover how EventUp Planner helps optimize your event management!

Supporting Corporate Social Responsibility Initiatives: 7 Event Ideas for Businesses to Consider

  • Event Trends
Supporting Corporate Social Responsibility Initiatives: 7 Event Ideas for Businesses to Consider

Corporate social responsibility, or CSR, is broadly defined as a company’s efforts to improve society in some way. These corporate efforts can be as small as implementing an environmentally friendly policy change or as large as managing a major event.

Corporate social responsibility is not mandated in the U.S. Rather, it’s an extra effort to make the world a better place by benefiting the community as a whole. CSR efforts can look different depending on the company, but the overall goal is the same—to increase positive social value.

In this article, we will cover the benefits of corporate social responsibility and offer 7 CSR event ideas for your company to try out today. Let’s get started!

What Are the Benefits of Corporate Social Responsibility

From a company’s perspective, CSR can sometimes feel like an extra task to check off, but a robust CSR program can reap some significant, tangible benefits beyond the obvious of helping to fill a need in society. These benefits express themselves along several different dimensions: 

  • Increased employee engagement. Double the Donation found that 71% of employees prefer to work at a company that participates in philanthropy. Advertise your corporate social responsibility initiatives to recruit and retain a passionate, engaged workforce.
  • Increased customer loyalty. A company’s corporate social responsibility initiatives act as a major differentiator for current and potential customers. In fact, customers are more likely to become long-term brand ambassadors if they support your give-back efforts. 
  • Positive public perception. Supporting corporate social responsibility initiatives is one of the best ways to further your company’s public image. A company that invests its resources to further social good stands out against its competitors. 

Aside from corporate advantages, CSR positively impacts nonprofits and communities. Nonprofit organizations receive grants, donations, and volunteer hours from companies to further their missions. In turn, local and global communities feel the positive ripple effects. 

Top 7 Corporate Social Responsibility Event Ideas for Businesses

There is certainly not a lack of need when it comes to economic, educational, or philanthropic causes. Because there are so many corporate social responsibility opportunities, choosing to support meaningful ones that align with your corporate values is essential. Think about it this way — your CSR initiatives are evidence of your company’s ethics at work.

Here are some examples of simple yet purposeful corporate social responsibility event ideas for your company to try out to get your feet wet in the philanthropic world of giving back:

1. Launch a Sneaker Recycling Program

How many employees have an extra pair of running shoes? They or their growing family will most likely have a couple of extra shoes to spare. Partner with a fundraising provider like Sneakers4Good to raise support for an organization of your choice.

Simply collect gently worn, used, and new athletic shoes. Then, use Sneakers4Good’s pre-paid shipping bags to ship the collected sneakers to the Sneakers4Good warehouse. From there, the athletic shoes will be distributed to micro-entrepreneurs in developing nations. Sneakers4Good will also send your company a check for your sneaker-collecting efforts, which you can then donate to the nonprofit of your choice.

Consider hosting a competition by rewarding the employee or corporate team who has collected the most running shoes over a defined period. 

2. Plan a Matching Gift Drive

Initiate a matching gift drive as a part of your corporate philanthropy efforts. If you’re new to matching gifts, it’s a philanthropic program through which companies match their employees’ donations to nonprofits, usually in a 1:1 ratio. However, some companies match gifts in a 2:1 or even 3:1 ratio.

Matching gifts encourage employees to donate to a nonprofit of their choice with a promise of 1:1 corporate donation backing. Employees are generally free to choose which nonprofit to contribute to, and companies reap the benefits of maintaining their corporate social responsibility image while letting their employees take the steering wheel. It’s a win-win for companies, employees, and selected nonprofits. 

3. Host a Virtual Corporate Social Responsibility Webinar

Not sure which corporate social responsibility event idea is right? Research several corporate social responsibility events and have your employees complete a survey concerning which causes they’d like to know more about from you. Also, host a virtual corporate social responsibility webinar to explore different causes and initiatives directly with them. (Note: You can do this using Attendease Virtual Studio!)

Compile your list of survey responses and invite the corresponding nonprofit leaders to talk at an organized webinar. Give these organizational leaders time to discuss their mission and what your company can do to help. During the webinar, plan to answer questions and explore corporate social responsibility event alternatives. 

4. Host an Environmental Clean-up

Make your city sparkle with a dedicated corporate social responsibility clean-up effort. If your office is near the coast, this could look like spending an afternoon fishing plastic off sandy beaches. If your office is located in a relatively spotless part of town, consider reaching out to neighboring cities and lending a helping hand.

Partner with local parks to plant trees and assist with their trash-free initiatives. Or use your outdoor corporate social responsibility event as an opportunity to celebrate Earth Day.

5. Participate in a Nonprofit Fundraising Event

Raise funds and awareness by participating in nonprofit fundraising events. From online challenges to in-person parties, there is a wide range of potential events to consider. Your company can also join in a pre-made event or plan your own on behalf of a charity.

Potential fundraising events could include hosting a trivia night, fundraising 5K, a field day competition, a used book drive, or a silent auction. The event options are endless! Added bonus, if you’re an Attendease customer, you can use Attendease to register people for your event.

6. Volunteer at an Animal Shelter

Are your company employees animal lovers? Volunteer at a local animal shelter as a part of your corporate social responsibility initiatives. Most shelters have Corporate Service Days to coordinate your volunteer hours.

Go online and fill out the related company volunteer request form. Note that many forms also require a donation as a part of your volunteer efforts.

7. Offer Micro-Volunteering Opportunities

If your company can’t commit to full days of service, try out some micro-volunteering opportunities. These volunteer events are short-term, low-commitment events or tasks that help nonprofits get ahead. They could look like attending a virtual event such as a silent auction, providing nonprofit survey feedback, sorting cans at a food drive, or providing pro-bono professional services as part of your regular work.

Corporate volunteer grants are another low-effort corporate social responsibility alternative. These corporate giving programs encourage volunteerism by donating monetary grants to nonprofits where their employees regularly volunteer. 

These grants communicate to prospective employees, customers, and competitors that your company is invested in backing social good causes. 

Social Responsibility Opportunities Exist Everywhere

How will your company use CSR initiatives to back its reputation? Environmental, ethical, educational, and philanthropic event-related opportunities exist everywhere. Share this list with your employees to gauge interest and get started planning your next corporate social responsibility event today. 

Accessible Event Registration Platform – Make your events inclusive to all attendees with these accessibility best practices. 

How to Provide a Seamless Virtual Event Experience – Level up your next virtual event from start to finish with this guide.
5 Strategies to Improve Your Virtual Corporate Events – Make your corporate virtual events stand out with these 5 tips.

Simplify the Complexity of Managing Your Meetings and Events with a Powerful Suite of Tools

Make your attendees gather with ease. From small to large and complex events – plan and manage all of your events in one flexible platform – Attendease.


About the Author: Wayne Elsey is the founder and CEO of Elsey Enterprises (EE) and a Forbes Business Development Council member. Among his various independent brands, he is also the founder and CEO of Sneakers4Funds, which is a social enterprise that helps schools, churches, nonprofits, individuals, and other organizations raise funds while helping to support micro-enterprise (small business) opportunities in developing nations.

Author: Wayne Elsey

How to Provide a Seamless Virtual Event Experience

  • Event Management
  • Event Trends
seamless virtual event experience

Virtual events continue to be crucial for organizations seeking to deliver a unified message across multiple locations at once. It can be a global product launch, a large-scale hybrid conference, or a corporate training webinar… Today’s virtual event experience is more innovative and complex than ever before.

While virtual events present several unique challenges, none are more pivotal to overcome than empowering your audience. Make every individual feel valued throughout their journey is essential to a successful virtual event. This includes from the moment your attendees first discover your event website, to the days and weeks before and after the event.

We’ve compiled some tips to prioritize and excite your attendees leading up to your event. We ensure that feeling lasts long after your event has ended, too!

Event Promotion

Few pieces are more key to your event’s success than consistent marketing. Leverage your existing brand channels to grab attention and tell your event’s story! This will build excitement and encourage your attendees not just to sign up, but to stay glued to their screens in anticipation before, during, and after your event.  

In addition to your existing online channels, a well-designed, comprehensive registration website is necessary to make your event successful. On your event registration website, make sure to highlight the exciting parts of the event, like keynote speakers and top-rated sessions.

A great event registration website isn’t just about flashy images, though! Clear and consistent communication is the name of the game. Clearly explain items such as the event agenda and available pass types to ensure attendees know what to expect from your event.

Event Registration & Pre-Event

A seamless registration and pre-event experience will ensure your attendee’s readiness to attend after registration.

Here are a few tips on how to achieve exactly that:

  • Streamlining the experience on your website is one of the easiest steps you can take to build your attendee’s trust. Wherever possible, keep them on the same URL or web domain; the fewer redirects, the more confidence your attendee will have in your registration process. Ensure your brand is represented consistently throughout so they understand they are exactly where they’re supposed to be to register for your event.
  • If you have multiple pass types to choose from, work with your team before registration goes live to ensure the differences between types are clearly communicated. Attendees need to be able to easily choose what’s right for them. An FAQ page can prevent confusion about event complexity.
  • Once registration is complete, give your attendee a sense of pride and accomplishment by bringing them to a success or confirmation page. This is a great place to start building excitement around the event, so make sure you provide the opportunity for your attendee to share their excitement further on social media and invite their colleagues or friends to register.
  • Further cement a successful registration with a confirmation email. This email should have all the information your attendee needs so they can refer back to it as needed. If possible, you can make the experience even more seamless by providing an “add to calendar” option with the date, time, and a link to the virtual event right on the calendar invite. Now, your attendee will be able to avoid schedule conflicts and is only a click away from joining your event.
  • Empower your attendees to manage their profile and agenda after the registration process. Allow them to choose if they’d like to share their profile to the public or keep it private, and offer the option to “favourite” or sign up for the sessions they are most interested in. In doing this, your attendees will be able to keep track of their personal agenda, save their spot in sessions that have capacity limitations, and join waitlists as needed.

During the Event

Now that your event is finally on the horizon! You must do all you can to make sure your event is top-of-mind for your attendees—not just for your benefit, but theirs, too.

Apply your branding principles to this stage too. From the promotion and marketing materials to the waiting room, event platform, backgrounds, and beyond, a seamless virtual event experience features consistent branding and colours throughout.

Moreover, a consistently on-brand experience is an easy way to “wow” your attendees and keep them immersed in the experience.

Begin your event ramp-up by sending email reminders 1-3 days prior to your event. These can serve not only as reminders, but as ways to deliver important last-minute information and help build more excitement. On the day of the event, send another email reminder one hour before the event. And then, send an email again 5-15 minutes before it is set to begin. This ensures your waiting rooms are queuing up and helps avoid both late arrivals and subsequently late starts. Some attendees sign up for specific sessions only. Consider sending session-specific email reminders, in addition to or instead of general event reminders to them.

Selecting an easy-to-use, flexible platform for your attendees can also have its benefits, like encouraging audience participation. The best virtual event platforms include intuitive areas for chat and Q&A that can be moderated by your team. Elevate the user experience by providing links to all supporting and downloadable documents right in the chat, rather than having your attendees go searching for them.

Last but certainly not least: ensure your schedule includes break times, especially in multi-track events where you may have simultaneous sessions happening at the same time. Just like in an in-person event, your audience will need time to recharge, stretch, refill water bottles, or go for a quick washroom break before starting their next session(s). If you are providing longer breaks, consider adding some entertainment to your event. Live music, DJs, comedy, or professionally produced breakout videos can help take your virtual event to the next level.

Post-Event

Just because your attendees have logged off, doesn’t mean their journey is over! Be sure to send all attendees a thank you email explaining how to access event recordings and recaps with links.

Within the first 24 hours post-event would be a great time to also send out email surveys. You may collect data on both what went well and what could be improved in future events. This data can be indispensable in organizing your next successful event.

Conclusion

If you’re looking to build a stunning virtual event experience from start to finish, consider Attendease.

Attendease allows corporate teams to manage live and on-demand virtual sessions—for events both large and small—and to build a stellar experience for attendees so they are excited to join over and over again!

Attendease is foundational event software that:

  • Provides a seamless, fully branded experience by livestreaming directly to your Attendease event website
  • Integrates with any URL-based video conferencing provider
  • Allows you to choose between a single or multi-session broadcast
  • Automatically generates meeting links for all sessions
  • Offers users the ability to register to specific sessions and build personal event agendas
  • Automatically updates meeting links into email reminders and your event website

Streamline the planning and management of all your online meetings and events with our easy to use, fully-integrated platform. Book a discovery call with Attendease today to learn more!

A Guide to Creating Inclusive & Accessible Events (Checklist)

  • Event Trends
  • Product News
Web Accessibility

Event experiences should be for all: from the event website and landing page to the registration process, all the way to the event itself, and post-event communication and surveys. But the reality is that most events and meetings are not, unfortunately, delivering an accessible event experience at all touchpoints for their attendees. 

Here are some considerations you should be providing to create accessible event experiences for your audience.

Understanding Assistive Technology for Event Accessibility

People with disabilities access and navigate the Web differently, depending on their individual needs and preferences. Many times, assistive technology is used to ensure users can access, understand, and navigate websites. 

In a broad sense, assistive technology (AT) is any device, piece of equipment, or system that helps a person with a disability increase, maintain, or improve their functional capabilities. 

Examples of assistive technology include:

  • Alternative Keyboard
  • Alternative Mouse
  • Head Wand
  • Mouth Stick
  • Refreshable Braille Display
  • Screen Magnifier
  • Screen Reader
  • Voice Recognition software

With that in mind, it’s important to consider that your event website and registration journey is accessible to these tools so that users with minor or major impairments can still navigate and understand your website and, ultimately, register and attend your event. 

Event Website Accessibility Features to Consider

Simplified Navigation & Content Structure 

A clear and straightforward layout for easy navigation and exploration of the entire event website can make for a truly accessible event experience for your attendees.

Simplified summaries for passages of text can also make it easier to understand the content of your website. The document outline feature can provide a representation of the content that only shows the headings and relevant structures (such as headings, nesting, and hierarchy) to help provide orientation and an overview of the contents. This can also help to avoid overloading the user with information.

Reduced Interface 

Provide an option that only shows the most relevant information or more frequently used functions; for example, by hiding other parts of the content that can distract users or make it harder to navigate the website.

Color Contrast

Make sure you use strong color contrast between text and images of your digital assets so that attendees with visual impairments or cognitive disabilities can read the text and navigate through the online event with utmost ease.

Text Size Adjustment

Ensure that you use font types, sizes, colors, and spacing ideal to make text easier to read. Provide guests with the option to change the size of the font to zoom in and out to support their vision and read through the event without any difficulty.

Page Narration / Text-to-speech 

Speech output can automatically convert text into a synthesized voice reading the text aloud. By providing on-screen text narration, guests with visual impairments can access all the content on your event website.

Accessibility Features for Video and Virtual Events

Audio Descriptions 

Also referred to as “video descriptions” and “described video,” these narrations describe important visual details in a video. 

Captions 

Text with a verbatim recording of any speech and with descriptions of relevant auditory information that appears simultaneously with the audio (including audio that accompanies video in multimedia). For real-time captioning, typically, professional CART writers are necessary.

Transcripts 

Text manuscripts containing the correct sequence of verbatim recordings of any speech and descriptions of important auditory or visual information.

Accessibility Compliance for Event Website Content

Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 is a set of recommendations by the W3 working group that follows best practices for ADA (American Disability Act) website accessibility compliance. 

The WCAG 2.1 AA covers a wide range of recommendations for making Web content more accessible. Following these guidelines will make content more accessible to a wider range of people with disabilities, including accommodations for blindness and low vision, deafness and hearing loss, limited movement, speech disabilities, photosensitivity, and combinations of these, and some accommodations for learning disabilities and cognitive limitations; but will not address every user need for people with these disabilities. 

These guidelines address the accessibility of web content on desktops, laptops, tablets, and mobile devices. Following these guidelines will also make Web content more usable to users in general.

Event Management Software with Accessibility Compliance

We are pleased to announce that, in an effort to support Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs (DEI), the Attendease platform, as of May 27, 2022, is compliant with W3 WCAG 2.1 AA.

The Attendease platform allows customers to use the features and functionality to manage and execute their portfolio of events and attendee-facing websites. While the Attendease dashboard is NOT accessible compliant, the W3 WCAG 2.1 AA is true for the attendee-facing event websites using Attendease’s pre-built website templates. This means event planners can use our event platform and pre-built templates to deliver accessible event experiences to users. 

Event Accessibility Checklist

Here’s a checklist to help you ensure accessibility and inclusion for all event attendees.

Venue Accessibility:

  • Is the venue wheelchair accessible?
  • Are there ramps and elevators available?
  • Are there accessible parking spaces?
  • Are there clear signage and pathways for people with visual impairments?

Communication:

  • Is event information available in multiple formats (text, audio, video)?
  • Are announcements made audibly and visibly?
  • Is there a designated area for sign language interpreters?

Registration & Check-In:

  • Is online registration accessible to people with disabilities?
  • Are there alternative registration methods for those who cannot use the online system?
  • Is the check-in process easy for everyone, including those with mobility challenges?

Seating Arrangements:

  • Are there designated spaces for wheelchair users?
  • Is there flexibility in seating arrangements to accommodate different needs?
  • Are there quiet areas for attendees who may need a break?

Audio & Visuals:

  • Are there subtitles or sign language interpreters for presentations?
  • Is the sound system clear and adjustable?
  • Are visuals in high contrast for those with visual impairments?

Restrooms:

  • Are there accessible restrooms with proper signage?
  • Are changing facilities available for those with different abilities?

Networking & Social Spaces:

  • Are social spaces accessible to everyone?
  • Is there seating available for those who need it?
  • Are networking activities inclusive and accessible?

Event Materials:

  • Are event materials available in accessible formats?
  • Is there a way for attendees to request materials in advance?
  • Are presentation slides provided in advance for those who use screen readers?

Food & Beverages:

  • Are dietary restrictions considered in menu planning?
  • Is information about ingredients and allergens provided?
  • Are there alternatives for those with specific dietary needs?

Emergency Planning:

  • Is the emergency evacuation plan accessible to everyone?
  • Are staff trained to assist attendees with disabilities during emergencies?
  • Are there designated meeting points for people with mobility challenges?

Deliver Inclusive & Accessible Events with Attendease

Contact us to learn how Attendease can help you start, improve, and perfect your journey to deliver an accessible event experience for all of your attendees.

4 questions that may save your hybrid events

  • Event Trends
Hybrid event production

Hybrid events are not new – if you think about it, you have likely participated in many hybrid events in the past. Most live TV programs, for instance, are part face-to-face and part virtual: they may have an in-person audience and most definitely they have a remote audience watching through their screens. 

Some conferences were already offering hybrid formats prior to the pandemic. The main program would be in-person;  those who couldn’t commit (or afford) to travel and multi-day stays would watch the conference program online through a more affordable ticket option.

But as we speak more about hybrid as a normal evolution of events in a scenario of pandemic and recovery, this buzzword is causing discomfort among planners who are unsure about how to put their best foot forward as in-person events start to slowly make a comeback. 

If you are still not sure about how to put together your hybrid event, ask yourself these four questions.

1) Is hybrid the right format for this event?

For those who were not managing hybrid events pre-pandemic, being forced to pivot into this format can be scary. But going hybrid is not a must – it’s just an option, if and when it makes sense. Before jumping on the bandwagon and hosting hybrid events, the real question you need to answer is: do you actually need to host a hybrid event?

In our latest Ask Me Anything session with industry experts, panelists seem to agree that hybrid is not the right answer for every single type of event. 

Howard Givner, CEO and Founder of the Event Leadership Institute, shared that “Thinking about hybrid, it shouldn’t be that you have to go in-person and virtual for every event. It might make sense in some, or it might make sense to do just an in-person event. And it might make sense for other situations just to do a virtual event, There’s not going to be a single playbook that gets you forward. And this is where there’s an opportunity for event professionals to be able to command a series of vehicles that they can tap depending on the goal of the organization, depending on who the audience is and how they want to reach them, and how that content and experiences are delivered.” 

Consider the objective of your event. Then choose the best format to use to achieve those objectives. 

2) Do you have the buy-in you need?

If you decide that hybrid is the right format, then you may run into another challenge: getting buy-in. Because hybrid formats will likely be more costly to produce than a straight-up virtual event, it creates yet another barrier for event professionals to solve when hosting meetings and events in 2021 and beyond.

To Howard Givner, the deeper question is around how to get buy-in for a hybrid event and how to make it feasible. It’s all about how you position the benefits of running a hybrid event. For instance:

  • You can reach a larger audience
  • You can have sponsorship packages that leverage both virtual and in-person components

“Although hybrid events are going to be more expensive, I also think they open up a lot more monetization opportunities. We’re seeing that conferences that used to be for 250 people now have an audience of 2,000 people online. If you can do that very well and monetize that, you can make a lot more money in your ticket sales and in your sponsorship sales,” says Givner. 

Showing these benefits to key stakeholders will be key to successfully get support to go ahead with a well-produced hybrid event. 

3) Are you partnering with the right vendors?

Managing a hybrid event is like managing two events in one: you have the virtual and the in-person components, but they have intersecting points. Having a technology that can connect these two points is essential both for planning the event and providing a cohesive, engaging experience for your audience.

Choosing a versatile event management solution, like Attendease, will be a smart decision to support event planners in managing a portfolio of varied events, whether in-person, virtual or hybrid – without having to switch tech depending on the event format. This will also be key to keep your efficiencies up while lowering overall costs. 

4) Do you have the right team for your hybrid events?

With a hybrid event, your event team may need to broaden as well. As Sarah Eaton, Senior Account Director at Crawford Group, shared at our Ask Me Anything panel: “Hybrid needs to be supported by a much bigger team, because you’re going to have a team that’s managing that live, programmatic piece, and then another team that’s managing that virtual piece. So in terms of resourcing, there’s going to be a lot of challenges in determining who’s going to support each side of that event, and working in both a collaborative manner as well as an independent manner to make those two events work together.”

Contracting an external workforce may be a good solution to find skilled professionals that can support your events team when needed, rather than hiring permanent employees.

Set yourself up for success with your hybrid events

Planning a hybrid event can be a challenge for most planners who were used to the in-person or virtual event formats. Before you take on what are essentially two concurrent events, make sure you are set up for success. Deciding if this format is appropriate to achieve your goals is the most important question you can ask. If the answer is yes, clearly communicate the benefits of this event format to stakeholders, and make sure you have the technology and team to put on a great show!

Find out how an award-winning event management platform can raise your game in any format – virtual, in-person or hybrid.

Is the pandemic the shake-up the events industry desperately needed?

  • Event Trends
How to Analyze Event Success Metrics: Part 2 Blog Banner

5 trends that are transforming events in a pandemic world

We have now reached the one-year anniversary of the global COVID-19 pandemic: one year since the world and the events industry has turned upside down. During this time, we have seen the entire industry pivot from in-person to virtual events while event professionals scrambled to find footing on unstable grounds. 

The industry got hit with massive layoffs, budget restrictions, and event cancellations. Meanwhile, virtual programs expanded,  leaving event professionals overwhelmed as they figured out a new way to manage events and how to do more with less. 

But with crisis rises opportunities. We can see a shift in event management processes that may persevere longer than the pandemic itself. And that may not all be bad news. 

Here are 5 trends that are transforming – and enhancing – meetings and events.

1- Embracing innovation

As we change the way we host events, out of necessity, we have learned new ways to innovate. Being creative with how we put our events together and how we use our resources is an essential skill as we continue to navigate this new era for events. 

Some would argue it’s about time. Event strategist Liz King nails it when she said in a recent panel that “Thinking outside the box is going to be critical, because the events industry has, sadly, very much lacked a level of creativity that we’re known for. We’re a creative industry. And yet, if you look at a lot of what existed in the industry, pre-2020, it wasn’t that innovative and creative. So I think we got to rev that creativity up.”. 

Liz King Caruso Quote on Hybrid Events

That includes going back to the basics – event design – and thinking of your audience first. “The events that have been the most successful are the ones that have made it more about design over platform,” said event expert Tahira Endean in a recent interview. We couldn’t agree more. 

In terms of technology, there’s a temptation among planners (like almost every industry) to adopt the latest tech without determining if that’s what they really need. Can you manage all event types (virtual and in-person) from that platform? Being creative and innovative doesn’t always need to involve a shiny new technology. It’s more about how you can put the best experience to your attendees, supported by the right technology. 

2- Learning versatility

Virtual events are not going anywhere. While planners continue to explore solutions to host virtual events, they also need to be ready for the future of events. And the future is hybrid. That large meeting scheduled for next November might be in person; more likely, it will be a combination of face-to-face and virtual. 

We’ve discovered many advantages to meeting virtually (cost savings being a key benefit). It makes no sense to go back to “business as usual”. At the same time, committing to virtual event platforms now can look like a mistake in a few months, once events start to shift once again. Planning for versatility will be key to future-proof your event technology for what’s yet to come.

Onboarding a team to learn new technology takes time, and the process alone to shop for a tech provider is already a ride on its own. Choosing a versatile event management solution will be a smart decision to support event planners in managing a portfolio of varied events. That means finding technology that can support all your event types, whether virtual, in-person, or hybrid.  

3- Creative partnerships

Chances are, your events team is smaller than it was a year ago. With the wave of layoffs caused by the pandemic, having strategic partners working with you has never been so crucial. With smaller event teams managing more complex events, we need to learn how to leverage all the resources at hand.

Event technology companies may have a team available to help you put your event together, whether by actually setting up the event for you, or just providing you with the resources you need to get up and running faster. Easy-to-use solutions will also save you time in the long run.

Another place to look for help is at schools and associations. With the pandemic, a number of recent grads found themselves with no place to go. This could be a good opportunity to provide internship opportunities, offer contract work, or hire entry-level planners that can help you as required.

4- Focus on engagement

We used to think about engagement at events in terms of live discussions, networking opportunities, and informal hallway conversations. That all disappeared when events went virtual. Event planners were challenged with how to get people to feel involved, join a conversation, and share their thoughts. 

Experimentation started with real-time polls and virtual breakout rooms. Teams and groups started to engage in remote events such as online cooking classes and games. Events incorporated virtual concerts and performances. We started to have fun in ways we didn’t imagine prior to 2020. This focus on engagement was important in reinforcing the value of events.

5- Streamlining systems & processes

Working smarter has become part of your job description. With fewer people to support your event efforts, any systems and processes that can be implemented and help to save time will generate a huge impact for the entire organization. Take stock: think of the daily tasks that you perform and how they could be streamlined.

For example, going leaner with your technology stack could actually save you time (and money). With fewer tools to manage, you can better control all moving parts of your event without being overwhelmed by switching from one platform to another. Finding technology that integrates with your stack can also support this effort since the data will flow more easily from one tool to another.

Creating processes can also be a time saver. Try to batch tasks that are similar and do them together. Write several versions of marketing content at the same time. Set aside time to update your agenda and manage speakers so your attention isn’t bouncing between individual emails.The goal is to focus on the tasks less often, and for longer, so you can save time, prevent distraction, and work more efficiently. Similarly, working with a single tech platform can save you time and money. 

Moving forward with optimism and creativity 

While we weren’t looking for a cataclysmic industry shake-up, it’s not hard to see the silver lining from the past year. This is a good time to identify lessons learned. Events planners are more diligent about creativity in event design. We’re using meeting technology in interesting and different ways. We’ve discovered new ways to engage virtually. 

There are great meeting moments ahead if we make room for innovation and creative thinking.

How Virtual & Hybrid Events Are the Future of Corporate Meetings And Events

  • Event Trends
hybrid event

“Hybrid events combine face-to-face and virtual audiences and allow you to share your content across a much broader audience. With appropriate use of back channels, either private within the media forum or other social channels, a hybrid has the power to connect across borders and boundaries. In our current state of never enough time or money to do it all, hybrid events offer a great solution for bringing together the largest audience”.  From Intentional Event Design. Our Professional Opportunity, 2017. 

Nobody could have expected it would take a global pandemic for the world to shift to virtual, and eventually hybrid events, making this more valid today as we consider re-entry from digital/virtual to our first live events where we anticipate ‘hybrid is our future’. 

With varied views on when we will return to live events, virtual events have allowed corporations to stay connected to their teams, clients and customers and the numbers show this will continue.

The numbers don’t lie. 

In the January 2021 Report by the Event Manager Blog based on a survey of 5,000 event professionals 67 percent of respondents agree that hybrid is the future of events, and 71 percent said that they would continue to employ a digital strategy even after live events return.

But the numbers don’t tell the whole story.

The 2020 January Dashboard from PCMA shows the frustration with hybrid. Planners who are budgeting for a hybrid event are finding the costs more difficult to justify: 44 percent said it was their top challenge in January vs. 37 percent in December. As one planner said, the issue is trying to design hybrid events “that are not double the expense and effort. Otherwise, live events won’t happen until the pandemic is over and digital will be a piece of the live event, but not the same production quality and effort of an all-digital event. Unless vendors can come up with a way to make that affordable, the large in-person meetings will continue to languish as it’s not commercially feasible to do both well right now.”

The reality of home-based, remote workers and digital nomads underlaying many global workforces requires corporations to think differently about meetings and events going forward. As noted above there does need to be an understanding that: 

  • a virtual event is not free and investment in the tools that do these well and the people trained to deliver are critical
  • a hybrid event requires two teams – one focused on the digital event and one focused on the live event  
  • you need someone paying attention to the production that delivers the meaningful intersection of these two 
  • face-to-face events where trust is built and planned and serendipitous dialogues are key elements will remain a core business driver in the future, but can benefit from augmenting with the above 

How are they the future? One step at a time, one event at a time. Back to the basics. 

  1. Why are you meeting? Once you have defined the purpose you can work with your stakeholders to determine the best approach. 
  2. Who is your audience? Internal, external, a combination. How many people do you need to reach? Are you sharing top-down messages, offering a connection and teambuilding opportunity, seeking space for dialogue and innovation? Some of these will be BEST face-to-face but with forethought can be accomplished virtually. 
  3. How can you best accomplish the goals at hand? Will it work to connect a live audience or live pods or are you best to have individual virtual connections? Do you need a particular type of platform to enable visual sharing for collaboration or one where you can create a sponsor hall? Are you looking for planned networking where you choose who meets or serendipitous networking where the individuals are either randomized or can float avatars between groups of people? These are all examples of options we have available.
  4. Where it requires a home base and with a global audience understanding the When – I have learned over this past year there is no such thing as a ‘good two-hour window’ when dealing with a global audience. Consider what needs to be live, what can be recorded and shared later, and the best time to reach the maximum amount of the largest audience share.

For example, delivering a message top down to a global audience – virtual lets you do this easily, in real time and hybrid lets you bring together an appropriately sized regional, national or global audience under one roof and then extend the message with hybrid delivering the messaging to offices, pods or individuals who log in to hear the message in real time still creating a sense of unity. 

These will continue to have a place going forward. Meetings, typically more of a business focus are easier to translate. Events, which by their nature have more components that create connection and build the feeling of being part of a tribe will benefit the most from the return to live to deliver maximum benefits. Collectively, the event creators and the platform designers will continue to get better at the ideation and delivery of cool, heartfelt digital events that create meaningful and memorable participant experiences.

This article was written exclusively for Attendease, written by Tahira Endean, CITP, CMP, DES, CED – Head of Events, SITE global.

12 Event Trends and Shifts

  • Event Trends
12 Event Trends and Shifts blog banner image

Event trends and shifts are…well…ever evolving. A trend is a passing fancy, like the Pantone Color of the Year. In the last five years Pantone has made this interesting, including ‘ultraviolet’ and ‘greenery’ and for the complexities of the 2020 and 2021 they addressed it with two colors. Ultimate Grey with Illuminating (yellow) “Practical and rock solid but at the same time warming and optimistic, the union of PANTONE 17-5104 Ultimate Gray + PANTONE 13-0647 Illuminating is one of strength and positivity. It is a story of color that encapsulates deeper feelings of thoughtfulness with the promise of something sunny and friendly.” 

This eloquently sums up what 2021 needed as we returned to live events. When we emerged from our government-imposed cocoons, we were less likely to find participants content with trends that met pop culture standards but rather shifted and sought those that tied into the deeper values they had put to the test over those cray past year. How will we need to respond?

Shift: Personal Safety, Pandemic Style 

To consider attending a live event in 2021, we will need to understand how we will remain safe across the entire journey, whether a 3-hour or a 3-day event. Communication from the first touchpoint must answer the questions every experienced traveler will have. From the website to the app, emails to clear signage pathways on-site, clarity is key for all participants. 

Our Duty of Care may well require an on-site health screening, arriving with results showing a negative Covid test, proof of vaccination or showing our digital health passport as step one, with many airlines, countries and counties having these requirements in place. Next is the Social Contract, the new Code of Conduct with the event where we agree to maintain safe distancing, wear masks and to not participate if we are feeling unwell. There are a number of resources including the CDC who offer guidance – understand this is critical and will require time to plan and communicate.

Shift: Touchless

In 2021 the only thing we are touching is our own device. From airport and hotel check-in, security lines and event registration will be enabled with automatic doors, mobile ticket scans and facial recognition and on-site services will continue in this fashion, from collecting information and exchanging e-business cards while networking. As we enter public event spaces, we will be temperature scanned, logged in for both our learning CEUs and contact tracing, reminded to wear our masks. From here we follow the directional information to our socially distanced seating, meeting and eating spaces. Food and beverage service will evolve from lines and buffets to service in individual containers or plates and offered with minimal contact points. 

Passing Trend: Hugless

We will greet friends without hugs and colleagues without handshakes. This is the one touch we will crave and celebrate the return to. As we gain herd immunity through a global vaccination program and decrease physical distancing among humans, we will have set up the systems to ease our way through many hospitality and travel functions. Technology will remove friction points and forge touchless access everywhere we go.

Shift: Revolution of Recognition and Rewards

One of the greatest challenges leaders face is managing and inspiring individuals when the rug has been pulled out from under the organizational structures we all knew. Traditional reward and recognition systems have changed. Every layer, every role, every individual has been affected in some way. Those who remain employed are working harder than ever, often with less constraints (ie. I am able to work from home) and more challenges in the multiple roles that we face at home.

We are also without the rewards we typically receive from work that are beyond a salary. This ranges from treats shared in a kitchen, the opportunity to glance across the meeting table when someone offers up a particularly fabulous idea that gets you siting up straighter or someone walking past your desk and giving you a high five or a verbal ‘well done’ continuing through more formal celebrations, merchandise or the ultimate reward, a travel incentive. Whether your meetings now take place in a boardroom or a zoom room, finding ways to show appreciation to individuals and our teams visibly remains critical. 

Expert Viewpoint:

Being authentic in appreciation goes a long way with internal teams. These events are planned to not only reward, but to also educate the team in an effort to strengthen the individuals and company to move forward. A strong culture means a strong company – this could not be more apparent as we move forward. 

Communication isn’t only for professional organization or product management. When arranging events for your internal team, be sure to communicate what will be happening, what expectations may be had, and what they should be looking for. Just like any program, it’s important to ensure you answer all questions and that no stone is unturned as you move forward.

Angie Ahrens, CMP

Trend: Shared Digital Experiences

There are still ways to connect now, replacing a live teambuilding day where you all go out in new matching shirts to a digital shared experience from a cooking class to an escape room as examples. We are gifting with items ranging from a new mug with a favorite beverage and snack to celebration boxes including everything from champagne to streamers and whatever else can be imagined. We have seen experiences from fabulous speakers to 24-hour extravaganzas bringing global teams to shared moments. 

Micro-Trend: Ultra Personalization

The ultimate reward of incentive travel has been mainly on hold through 2020 and stalled for much of 2021. Some organizations have hosted smaller groups or ‘bubble travel’ for individuals to benefit from an earned getaway. Reports including the Joint Industry Incentive Index indicates travel remains desired and will return through 2022 and beyond with can’t buy experiences rising again and delivering inspired, transformative moments for the individuals that travel with you will be the currency that delivers retention.

Shift: Thoughtful Inclusion

For several years we have seen a technology enabled shift to inclusive hiring, facing down unconscious bias and creating more diverse teams with a recognition this leads to more innovative design across any product or service offering. We recognize who we are is much more than what is seen, from how we look, our gender, mobility, orientation, the job we have or our age; we are linked by our values. With values alignment we become great contributors and are more engaged. As we all navigate from digital events to live events, we have much to consider, starting with inclusion at internal events. 

Expert viewpoint:

Be inclusive when designing internal events. A committee that brings different demographics of your audience can support crafting a program that drives ROO (Return on Objectives) for all participants. Now is the time to reimagine your internal programs. Start with the why and you will ensure it is not just another mediocre internal event.

Jennifer Glynn, CITP – Managing Director Meeting Encore and Intuitive Conferences & Events, Immediate Past President SITE global

On Trend: Events as Community Builders

Event professionals are the designers of the environments that support the social architecture created by organization’s leaders. We must design content and express it in a way that represents the culture of our organization and brings together divergent viewpoints. It is welcoming diverse voices that allows us to build stronger communities and this will be necessary for survival in a global marketplace. How we move forward is a responsibility we all share, and with a return to live events we must craft experiences and content to have maximum positive impact.

Shift: Hybrid is Here to Stay

Yes, it is like planning two events in one timeframe. It requires resources to do it well. It also leads to the next Shift, the Content Candy Store and becomes an where you need to plan how your organization will stand out. As we rebuild teams for the return to events, having specialists on your team who understand digital and hybrid integrations will become the new imperative. Hybrid is a tool that has been used to build FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) in the past for the “cool” events and is now a way we can continue to grow audience share, educate your participants and build connects across borders. It requires the strength of the platform with the marvelous work of the event designer to deliver on its promises now and in the future.

Shift: Content Candy Store

We have a plethora of content available to us in a wide range of price points from free, to member-only to widely available, covering any specialty interest. To stand out you must be able to micro-target your content to the specific audience that will derive the most value from it. Time is a resource that even for those between roles, remains a commodity so be clear about the relevant take-aways available. 

Shift: Regeneration 

Sustainability is not a buzzword and climate change is real. Event professionals have an opportunity to lead the way in how we return to travel, manage our groups of any size in destinations anywhere and come out with a net-positive people-planet-profit result. Now is the time to dig into how you can do this and there are many great resources, including the Global Destination Sustainability Movement and the Sustainable Event Alliance. The reality – the organizations you work for and with likely all have a sustainability policy and baking good practices into your events is simply good business.

Shift: Creative Reinvention

From bringing side hustles to life, to starting new ventures and reinventing offerings, organizations from solopreneur to our largest event agencies, associations and corporations have been deeply impacted in a multitude of ways. This has caused us to dig deep, to ask for help, to find ways to connect when we cannot connect live, to prove our resilience, sometimes needed on a daily basis. Both organizations and individuals have responded with creativity because this is ultimately who we are, individuals that seek to serve, to collaborate, to create and to transform.  

Do we have a lot to think about going forward? We sure do, but back to being creative, resilient powerhouses – you got this!

Spotlight: The Present & Future of Events with Tahira Endean

  • Event Trends
Spotlight: The Present & Future of Events with Tahira Endean

As the world of events continues to pivot, we see a rush of technology solutions popping with the promise of seamless virtual events. But most of the conversation is being driven by marketers who have an agenda, not actual event experts. We want to change the conversation by amplifying the voice of industry leaders who are on the battlefield, confronting the real challenges event planners are facing daily.

We had the opportunity to talk recently with Tahira Endean, CITP, CMP,DES,CED, Head of Events at SITE (Society for Incentive Travel Excellence), about the future of events. Tahira describes herself as the world’s biggest event nerd. Her experience, enthusiasm and expertise are matched only by her creativity. She has worked in the meetings and events space for over 25 years. A certified Event Designer and Digital Strategist, Tahira holds a Diploma in Event Management and a Bachelor of Hospitality Management. She is a Certified Incentive Travel Professional and a CMP Certified Meeting Professional. She is also the author of “Intentional Event Design”, a book about creating events based on seven distinct intentions in order to drive stronger, better results.

As we approach the end of a challenging and transformational year, we chatted with Tahira about the state of the events industry, what innovations have appeared and what’s to come.

How is the event’s industry coping with the pandemic?

Everybody’s job [in the event’s industry] has been shifted in some way. It could be that they’re doing more with less resources. It could be that they don’t have a job anymore, that they’ve been laid off or they’ve been furloughed. Some event professionals may have found new jobs; some haven’t. Some have pivoted to doing virtual and digital events, and some are still just trying to figure out how they’re going to do events next year.

The biggest lesson has been that there’s just no easy way to all of a sudden change everything that you’re doing and to not know what exactly is going to happen next. People have had to really dig deep for courage and resilience, and to really look at what they want to do, what they’re energized by, and how we can help our organizations at a time that’s really difficult. There is a lot of opportunity, but there’s also a lot of pressure.

What have we learned about running successful meetings and events during a pandemic?

The events that have been the most successful are the ones that have made it more about design over platform. One of the events I’ve enjoyed the most was one that SITE produced in September, our Young Leaders Conference. They are generally between 25 and 35 years old with less than five years specifically in incentives. But we had people from a broader range than that attended the event.

What I loved about it was that the committee planned it. They were all in. Everybody participated in making sure that it was successful. And we did it all in Zoom, which was a choice driven by economy. We said “Well, if we’re going to just have it in Zoom and not use a cool platform, then how are we going to make it awesome?”. We set the expectation: if you’re going to attend, be prepared to participate. Because we’re creating an agenda that will benefit from your participation. Everyone had their cameras on.

“We set the expectation: if you’re going to attend, be prepared to participate.”

Being new in their career, many of those people have lost their jobs. So, they were doing something different, or looking for new things, or trying new things. This was their opportunity to ask questions, get interesting answers and look at things in different ways. The event was over three short days (2.5 hours per day), and a lot of people stayed for the three days.

A few elements that worked well:

  •   Breakouts. The first day was about adaptation. We had some really great speakers talking about what they’ve lived through, and some great presentations. At the end, we did a reflection exercise where everybody went off into breakout rooms with the committee leaders and reflected on their learning. We took basic good learning principles and basic design principles and applied them. It worked.
  •   Access to senior leadership. On the second day, attendees got the opportunity to meet our board members and ask them about their careers and their advice. That’s always an opportunity that they love, and it was important to be able to recreate it.
  •   Fun. Every day we had a DJ at the end, and every day people stayed for 15 or 20 minutes just dancing. It was just a really great event from that perspective.
  •   Video breaks. We had lots of 2-minute interstitials with advice from industry leaders. Someone asked me just last week: “How did you get those people to give their videos?”– I just asked! I literally just asked. I said, “Can you give us a two minute video and pop into this Dropbox and film it horizontally and talk about what you’re doing?”-  and everybody said yes and did it, and it was great. The worst that could happen is someone says no.

How are we innovating?

I watched an interview the other day with Microsoft who pivoted $200 million worth of events into digital. I loved it, because what he was saying was all of the things that we had learned along the way, which was “make mistakes, go into this with your team knowing that you’re going to make mistakes and blame is not going to be late”. We’re all going to learn together how to do this better. We are definitely seeing digital fatigue, so we have to figure out ways to make things interesting and finding ways for people to connect, not just listen.

I just did a series of micro webinars. It’s exhausting to continually listen to one-hour webinars, so we did a series of 12-minute talks. David Allison works with Valuegraphics and has this amazing data about how people think and approach things and what kind of core values our participants are showing up with. We did this 12×12 series on YouTube that was really good fun.

 

“We’re all going to learn together how to do this better”

What are your predictions for the events industry?

I think that what we will see will be much like what we saw after the recessions. The events that we do might be smaller, but the people who are attending them have more reasons for being there. Events will become much more purpose driven and  much more people centric. These are the two things that I think are the most important in what we do.

“Events will become much more purpose driven and more people centric.”

Whether it’s doing safer air travel or having a better hotel experience, or having a meaningful event experience. It’s all about taking the things that we’re learning, and the things that we already know but don’t always apply. Good learning design principles – make people learn in 10 minute chunks; don’t make people sit down for 60 minutes and watch something.

Think about the reality that we are in, not just putting content out there. What people are craving now more than ever is ways to connect. It’s about finding ways that you can have those genuine connections with people and build our community around that. And that’s going to be the next piece of the puzzle that we really need to overcome in the next year.

“What people are craving now more than ever is ways to connect.”

How do we generate engagement at virtual events?

There’s a lot of good stuff happening out there – really great quizzes, team building, virtual escape rooms, and all different ways that people can interact digitally. And it just goes back to what’s the purpose of your meeting. Figure out what the purpose is.

Let’s use IBM Think as an example. It’s a super well produced event. It would usually happen around March in Las Vegas, and they would have around 30,000 attendees. Well, March this year happened to be when you couldn’t have a 30,000 people event in Vegas. So, they crafted a very well executed digital event, and 100,000 people showed up.

Because they are a technology platform, they’re using their own great skills they already have from a production and technology perspective, and they’re working with experienced experts in event design and creating a beautiful flow of an event that’s well executed and people will stay and watch it. It was new and fresh. It’s about creating the purpose and telling a story. And they told that story really well.

If your purpose is to share a message with tens of thousands of people, you have to be really clear on crafting that messaging and then create digitally engaging, well-produced content to do that. If your purpose, like ours with the SITE event, was to connect 100-200 people who are newer in their careers and looking to get some inspiration, connection and ideas for how they can move their careers forward, you’re going to design that event in a totally different way.

How is technology being used to support engagement?

I don’t think I’ve seen a quarter of what’s available out there to connect people online. There’s lots of great platforms out there. I think it’s about exploring what the opportunities are, because there are some different networking platforms that are really great.

Who would ever thought that people would go to escape rooms? Ten years ago, there were very few escape rooms in the world. Now there are 15,000 escape rooms in the world. And more, now that there are digital escape rooms. They’re a terrific way to get people to work together in small groups to solve problems and to come out on the other side stronger as a team. That’s their purpose.

Another example: using trivia as a way to get salespeople to connect to the information that you’ve given them about your product. That’s still effective. You’ve given them some information and you want to test that information with some kind of a digital game right away. Do you want to take that digital game into a mobile app and connect it to your learning management system? It all depends on what the need is, but there are lots of different and amazing ways to connect people.

What do you see for the future of event Design?

It’s going to take a while before we get to any kind of herd immunity that’s going to take us back to a pre-pandemic sort of state. And we’re far away from this reality right now. We’re going to have to rethink everything that we’re doing and how we’re approaching a duty of care.

“We’re going to have to rethink everything that we’re doing and how we’re approaching a duty of care.”

When you go into a hotel and everything is behind plexiglass and people are wearing masks – that’s going to be around for a while. It’s very different to facilitate a conversation between people who can stand in an open bar with a drink in their hand and have a networking conversation and I can see you across the room. For example, if I bring somebody over to meet you at an event, there’s a good chance we’ll be wearing a mask and that we still need to have some kind of physical distancing. That fundamentally changes events where we’ve relied on at face-to-face meetings.

How we design moving groups through our space, how we design seating, how we feed attendees, and how we get them to have dialogue – these have all fundamentally changed. I’m going to say for the foreseeable future, we’ll get past it. But not for a while. We just have to start at the beginning basically and continue to rethink events.

What does the “new normal” look like for events?

There’s a great whitepaper from IMEX about how we need to go back into events thinking about creating it regeneratively. I think that’s really important. It’s not just thinking about sustainability but thinking end-to-end, cradle-to-grave circular economy.

We need to step back and not just return to events as they were. Not back to that place of non-sustainable tourism meetings and events. We need to think about people’s safety and about the land that we’re on and the way we’re using it. We need to think about the people who are there to create things that are going to have a positive impact for the destinations that we’re in, and a positive impact for the organizations that we work with.

“We need to step back and not just return to events as they were.”

What do you see as you look to 2021 and beyond?

We’re at a great time of experimentation. Do we need to get slightly slicker at it? Possibly. We still need to keep it really human. That’s probably going to become even more important than when this started back in March. There is no possible way that we imagined that eight months later we would still be going back into lockdowns. There was a lot of optimism back in March. We thought we’d be meeting by August and in August we would be meeting by December, and by December… maybe we are meeting next June.

A lot of big companies have said that they won’t be doing live meetings for 2021 or at least until summer 2021. And maybe not just until 2022. That’s a massive impact on the 12 million people that are employed in the meeting industry and another 10 million people that are employed in the hospitality industry. All of these industries were impacted since we paused in-person events across the spectrum. We can keep doing digital events, but we also need to get back to safe travel and smart, regenerative, thoughtful meetings and events.

What are your favorite resources for event professionals?

Anything that helps to understand how organizations think is going to be useful, whether that’s Simon SinekJim Collins or other resources.

Some great podcasts that I listen to regularly:


We thank Tahira Endean for her time sharing her insights with us!