For nearly six months, the Talentspace team were eagerly planning our annual Berlin Talent Summit (BTS) - a highlight of our year, where bright young graduates and some of the most exciting companies in Germany meet, make connections, share knowledge and kick off some brilliant careers. The 2019 BTS had seen over 300 attendees and 35 companies, and we were expecting even greater numbers this year, with lots of returning clients and attendees who expressed their enthusiasm for the Talentspace mission. What could go wrong?
Then, of course, COVID-19 hit. Our utmost priority has always been the health and safety of our team, attendees, and partner companies, and as the reality of the pandemic became clear we realized the BTS in its present form could not go ahead. But that left us with the big decision: what should we do next? As wave after wave of events companies postponed or suspended any announcements until an equally uncertain summer, we found ourselves keen to take the pandemic as a challenge rather than a setback. We didn’t want to just go quiet for six months and hope for the best. An offline, in person, large scale event was clearly impossible. But what new possibilities had unfurled?
The making of the Online Talent Summit
Instead of cancelling the event, we asked ourselves whether we could deliver a Talent Summit as promised on April 24th - held entirely online. We quickly became excited by the possibilities the Online Talent Summit (OTS) offered: not only could our event and speakers go ahead as planned, but we could offer more talks (no room capacity to wrestle with) to more people (less accessibility restrictions).
At the same time, we felt like the typical avatar-led career fairs didn’t suit our style or our generation. We did some research within our existing community and found that - unsurprisingly, from a generation of Snapchat and TikTok-users - for our attendees and companies alike, video was critical. If we couldn’t meet in person, everyone agreed that it was still important to be able to communicate as close to face-to-face as possible. Other important factors came up from our early research: attendees wanted to be able to upvote each other’s questions, in a similar style to the Reddit format. They wanted some kind of equivalent of the career booth, where they could dip in and out of conversation with a company representative. After our research, we had a good idea of what the OTS experience should be.
But the platform we needed for it didn’t exist: so we had to build it. The fact that we were a small startup allowed us to shift gears overnight to build this new platform. And after six weeks of an extraordinary effort from our product and tech team, we launched the first ever OTS, where we hosted representatives from companies including Google, Porsche, Microsoft, BCG Digital Ventures, and many more. We were thrilled and grateful that they took the chance on Europe’s largest ever fully virtual career fair.