You’re only as good as your team. In recruiting events, this is doubly true, when you’re relying on your colleagues to make the event run as smoothly as possible, from registration to arrival to networking to speeches to follow-up post-date. Most of us in the industry have a fairly good idea of what makes up a good team. But the move to online recruiting events means changing or at least readjusting the way we do everything. It’s time to have a close look at the kind of team you’ll need to host an online recruiting event.
Whether you’re hosting a multi-day, thousand-plus participant event or simply an intimate workshop between 10 people, the general structure of your team should stay the same, but with more or less resources added. Think of your team in terms of departments: one department (i.e. “programming”) could be one person or 20.
Communications
Depending on the workload and your team set-up, there should be one team member in charge of communicating with participants and another with employers of your event. For larger-scale events, you will need to increase your communications team.
Communications can include promotional outreach such as social media activity, flyers (paper or digital), advertising, press releases, website updates and more, as well as internal communication with your participants and employers.
Your communications team should ideally have a resource bank of emails that they can use throughout the lead-up to the event as well as during the event itself and any post-event communication. These emails could include registration updates, timing notifications, and reminders on the day when an event is about to begin. Communication is all-important at an online event, as there’s less chance to interact naturally and in person with participants and employers; you need to make sure that any information they’ll need is easily accessible or arriving in their inboxes at just the right moment. A strategic communications plan and a top tier communications team is the best way to make sure everyone knows exactly where they need to be when, as well as what they’re doing.