Thinking about live-streaming your next internal town hall or company conference? Now is the perfect time to make the shift from in-person to live-stream events. With powerful live streaming platforms and audience engagement tools like Pigeonhole Live, hosting virtual or hybrid events has never been easier—or more effective for reaching dispersed teams.
Like in-person events, live stream events require you to engage in content preparation, run marketing campaigns to attract attendees and manage event logistics. However, there are two additional considerations when it comes to organising live stream events: ensuring high quality and uninterrupted live streams and keeping your audience engaged throughout the event.
While finding a reliable live streaming platform such as Brightcove ensures seamless, high quality video streaming for your audience, audience engagement poses a greater issue.
Contrary to an in-person event, a live stream will not have an emcee to keep the mood up, microphones for audience to raise questions or printed feedback surveys. These differences may pose a challenge in guiding the audience through and getting their voices heard during the event. However, a good audience engagement platform can help to replicate everything available at in-person events and more:
Define Clear Objectives
Start with clear goals: Are you aiming to boost engagement, generate leads, or increase reach? Your event strategy should reflect these priorities.
Choose the Right Tech Stack
Select reliable live streaming and engagement tools like Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and Pigeonhole Live to connect both virtual and in-person audiences seamlessly.
Build a Cohesive Agenda
Design a synchronized agenda that caters to both in-person and online attendees. Include breaks, Q&A segments, and interactive sessions that everyone can participate in.
Test All Equipment and Platforms
Conduct a dry run with all event tech—audio, video, polling, and Q&A features. Ensure both physical and remote setups work flawlessly.
Train Your Hosts and Speakers
Equip moderators and speakers with best practices for hybrid delivery, such as addressing both audiences and managing live questions effectively.
Engage Both Audiences Equally
Use real-time polling, live Q&A, reactions, and chat tools to keep remote participants just as engaged as those onsite.
Monitor in Real-Time and Adapt
Assign a tech team to monitor live performance and attendee feedback so you can troubleshoot and adapt instantly.
Capture and Analyze Feedback
Use post-event surveys and analytics tools to gather feedback, measure engagement, and identify improvements for your next hybrid event.
Like an emcee in an in-person event, you’ll want an audience engagement platform that allows you to keep your audience updated on the event happenings. For instance, you need to update them on any delays to keep them from getting distracted by an incoming email or leaving the live stream altogether. Informing them of speakers’ arrival at the studio would also help them feel engaged and present at the live stream.
With the convenience live streaming offers, your live audience could well run into the thousands. How do you maximise the learning value with a potentially large volume of questions and the overwhelming time pressure to address the questions?
Crowdsourcing questions from your audience allows you to tailor your content based on their interest. Once the live stream begins, you’ll want to have an open Q&A ready for any viewers to send in their questions. Allow a simple voting mechanism, to let them identify questions that resonate with them. You can turn on moderation to manage the quality of the questions raised and to keep them on topic. Consider allowing viewers to even tag questions to specific speakers, to help organise the subsequent Q&A period.
There’s a wealth of knowledge in your live audience. Use it to your advantage by allowing them to share it with others through a moderated chat, where they can engage in conversations while the presentation is ongoing. Getting them engrossed in discussions on topics you are delivering in your live stream is the best way to keep them from being distracted by a multitude of other activities.
Entice your audience with polls and quizzes in between presentations to break the monotone. You can poll them for opinions or test their knowledge on the content delivered and showcase the results in real time creating the same level of excitement as an in-person event.
If you’re taking questions from your audience in real-time, their questions are likely to be closely related to your current conversations. Have a tablet that lets you see the questions that are streaming in. Spontaneously infuse highly voted questions into your conversations to show your audience that their opinions are being heard. You’ll even save some time from having to do standalone Q&A segments.
Your live stream audience won’t stick around after the event unlike your physical audience, making feedbacks harder to collect. Set up a feedback survey before your final segment to get their opinion on what you did right and what can be done better in your next live stream. You can also get feedback in the form of shorter poll questions in between every segment.
While organising a live stream may seem daunting at first, engaging the right platforms to help you along will make the process a lot smoother and stress-free. With Pigeonhole Live, we are dedicated to helping you engage your audience regardless of the platform.
For more information on getting started with live events, hear from the experts at Brightcove’s upcoming webinar on 20th Sep, 10am EDT.
Q. What is a live-streamed event?
A. A live-streamed event is a real-time broadcast of a physical or virtual session to an online audience via a video platform.
Q. Why switch from in-person to live stream events?
A. Live stream events are cost-effective, scalable, and help you reach a wider audience without geographic limitations.
Q. How do you keep a virtual audience engaged?
A. Use interactive tools like live Q&A, polls, chat, and real-time reactions to involve participants throughout the session.
Q. Is live streaming suitable for internal meetings?
A. Yes, many companies now live stream town halls, team updates, and AMAs to increase accessibility and transparency.
Q. What tools do I need to run a live-stream event?
A. You'll need a video streaming platform (e.g. Zoom, Vimeo) and an engagement tool like Pigeonhole Live to enable interactivity.