When the COVID-19 pandemic hit Europe in early March, it triggered a wave of cancellations: sports games, concerts, exhibitions, and, of course, recruiting events. Hiring fairs were postponed; networking meetups were rescheduled to the autumn. Over the last few weeks, companies have been forced to reassess once more, as the likelihood of a longer period of isolation and perhaps even second waves of the virus sends the idea of life-as-usual receding further out of reach.
At Talentspace, we’ve spent the last three years designing graduate recruiting events, linking Europe’s brightest talents with its most exciting companies. Like other event organizers, the coronavirus crisis forced us to reevaluate everything we were doing — especially with our popular annual Berlin Talent Summit planned for April. But instead of cancelling, we made the decision to take all our offline knowledge online and launch Europe’s largest fully digital recruiting event.
It took five weeks, a young startup mentality, and a lot of sweat and tears. But on April 24th, we hosted close to 1000 young talents and 40 companies for a day of connections, insights, and advice. The Online Talent Summit (OTS) featured four keynote speeches, 90+ insight sessions, virtual career booths, 400+ one-to-one chats between talents and employers, and one live DJ set to send us out on a high note (we are in Berlin, after all).
If the OTS taught us one thing, it’s that digitizing recruiting events will be met with hunger and excitement from companies and talents alike - but it’s not as simple as throwing everyone into a Zoom session. If the OTS taught us more than one thing - well, here they are.
Build the right platform
We weren’t starting from scratch in the recruitment industry to create the Online Talent Summit - we already had a community of engaged talents who wanted to be part of the day and a network of companies who work with us. That made it easier to reach out, explain the change in circumstances, and reopen applications to join the OTS. But we still had to build the space itself.
Rather than sending out hundreds of Zoom links, we wanted to rethink the whole online event experience. We weren’t after a single tool, but rather something that could create an online experience from an offline experience we know so well. In five short weeks, our engineering team built a live event online platform that combined a lot of our favorite apps - Zoom, Slack, Calendly, LinkedIn - into one. The idea was to build something that was not circumstantially useful for recruiting events, but specifically designed to host and connect talents and employers.
Before we’d even finished building the platform, other recruiting event organizers, such as university career centers and career fair organizers became interested in the product we were developing. It was quickly clear that our first lesson out the gate was that in building a solution for our own problem, we’d created an offering that was attractive to many more organizations than just ourselves. We know first-hand how difficult organizing an online event can be, so we focused on making the platform easy to use and accessible for other users who need it… and who are now realizing that we may not be going back to offline events anytime soon.