The days of large universal trade shows and conferences are numbered, with corporate cuts in travel budgets forcing delegate counts downward, according to Joerg Rathenberg, vice president of marketing for Unisfair, who has observed that virtual business environments have prospered in proportion to the decline of the traditional trade show.
An increasingly globalised marketplace has made it harder to bring people together in a single geographic location, so it is perhaps no surprise that the past few years have seen virtual events grow in both number and attendance, particularly in the fields of marketing and training.
A recent survey among 550 marketing professionals in the US showed that 42% were planning to decrease marketing spend on physical events, while 60% planned to increase spending on virtual events and environments. Some 46% of participants expected that, within the following two years, half of all corporate events would include both a physical and a virtual component.
Initially, many event organisers worried that the new technology component might cannibalise the physical attendance of their events but, with the experience and hindsight of thousands of virtual events, most have found that virtual events have the ability to breathe new life into traditional conferences and events.
As a result, marketers are now combining the best of both worlds and finding new and creative ways to reach larger audiences across the globe with 'hybrid events'. But these new techniques require fresh thinking and different approaches. Simply replicating physical concepts in a virtual environment will certainly lead to disappointing results.
Here, then, are the three key ideas to keep in mind when planning a hybrid event:
This was part of Ariba's strategy when the company launched its annual user conference AribaLive!. Ariba, a corporate spend management company, created a two day virtual event for clients and prospects to jump-start its physical road show in six cities around the world. This virtual event generated enormous excitement and extensive press coverage even before Ariba began the physical tour. The virtual event enjoyed more than 2,900 registrants and 4,000 file downloads - generating high customer engagement right from the start.
A great example of this concept was Fortune Magazine's Most Powerful Women conference in 2010. Expertly moderated with speakers such as Hillary Clinton, Warren Buffet and an array of female executives, the event had 400 physical attendees in Washington DC and over 12,000 registrants on the virtual platform. How else would anyone ask a direct question to the secretary of state from the comfort of their own desk?
In the case of Planview, a portfolio management company based in Austin, Texas, switching to virtual did not mean depriving its attendees of the physical show perks. When Planview discovered from a customer survey that its annual user conference was in jeopardy due to restrictive travel budgets, the company launched Horizons, a two day virtual conference. And Planview knew its audience well. As most of its customers had never participated in a virtual event, Planview decided to send out welcome packages that included t-shirts, coffee mugs, and other conference materials. By bringing some physical elements to a virtual show, Planview reinforced customer engagement and took the virtual experience to the next level. Event metrics proved the concept to be a resounding success, with 3,270 visits to 18 booths and a 250% increase in attendance over their physical-only conference one year before.
Consequently, Unisfair offers the following best practice guidelines for creating and hosting successful hybrid events:
One of the great advantages of hybrid events is that the virtual environment provides unparalleled marketing intelligence to the organiser. Participants often find great value in attending both versions, which is why a joint registration process can be a great way to start.
However, the main benefit is that Hybrid events allow you to draw in dramatically larger audiences at a lower cost per attendee. The virtual environment provides increasingly more realistic experiences and interactivity for your participants. Sophisticated audio and video enables attendees to interact, share and collaborate as the boundary between the physical and the virtual world fades.
Adding a virtual component to an event allows your attendees to learn about which of their peers and colleagues are attending, view their profiles and seek out individuals to network with. It serves as a great destination for your entire audience to connect after the live day, to access all content and to extend the life of your event, possibly until the next edition. And removing the barriers that inhibit communication, collaboration and interactivity can be the key to energizing communities and making connections stronger and more profitable in the real world.
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