The COVID-19 pandemic has made it likely that most events for 2020 will take place online - and it may not stop there. Online events offer huge opportunities: they are more sustainable both financially and environmentally, they are more accessible and make it easier to connect with people across the world, and they offer new advantages in terms of format and programming.
In the recruitment industry, online career events are a particularly useful innovation, because companies and talents shouldn’t need to be in the same locale to link up with one another. Job seekers might be trying to decide on the perfect place to work, while companies might be struggling to find the right person for a role and need to expand their search. Some experts are also predicting that our widespread turn to remote working will extend past the coronavirus pandemic, as companies and employees discover the advantages and pleasures of working from home.
But that doesn’t make online events a no brainer. Online events present their own unique set of challenges that organizers need to grapple with when hosting them. It might be tempting to think that once you have your tech set-up sorted, you’ll be ready to host an online event any day, any time. In reality, online events also require careful thought, preparation, and an understanding of the challenges you might face.
To get you started, here are our tips on some of the best things to remember when hosting an online career event.
Don’t make sessions too long
It’s harder to hold the attention span of someone sitting in front of a laptop than someone in a quiet auditorium. There’s much less social pressure for your attendees to sit quietly and listen when their kitchen is right next door, and their laptop is both the gateway to your event and full of other distractions: social media, emails, music, Netflix. That means you have to work extra hard to make sure their focus stays with you and your event.
Of course, your event itself should be as interesting as possible. But another good tip is to reduce the length of your sessions. Consider reducing talking time by a third, or even a half. If your keynote speeches typically last forty minutes, try making them thirty minutes. If you have an AMA session that would normally last half an hour, try making it just fifteen minutes.
You will require your audience to pay close attention for a shorter amount of time, making it less likely that they will wander away, and the reduced length also has a psychological effect. Attendees will have less time to get all the information they want from the session, and so they are more likely to pay close attention, aware that they could miss a large portion of useful content very easily.