Health

  • Erica St Angel
    Fresh off a test drive at Event Camp National in Chicago, Erica St. Angel is ready to take this brand new presentation style out on the open road. She's got six chapters and eighteen potential paths for you to explore: from popular monetization models to stats on the growth of the blended event market, from hybrid event marketing techniques to little known tech tips that save time and money.
  • Lights, Camera, Action: Fool Proof Tips to Produce the Most Polished
    Ever wish you could ask an expert how to make your live streaming video look better? Here's your chance. This is a rare opportunity for one-on-one Q&A with one of the most well-respected streaming video consultants, writers and instructors around. Even if you aren't a techy or on either side of the camera, we guarantee you'll pick up a few tips that will step up the game of your webcasting team and IT/AV colleagues.
  • Lynn Randall
    The final in our four-part webinar series brings you the culmination of this educational series. In order to prepare you to integrate virtual event technologies to your event marketing plans, there is one final element to understand. The technology can feel daunting and understanding technical requirements goes beyond the event professional's standard skill set. However, this session will give you the basic understanding of technical requirements to get started.  After this session, you will leave with an understanding of:
  • Stephanie Martinez
    You know that feeling of camaraderie you build with fellow attendees during a conference? Have you ever wondered if it would be possible to keep that level of networking and interaction going long after the event is over?  Stephanie Martinez did. And she came up with a very clever way to launch that community on the heels of their first hybrid event: build the network on a foundation of conference content through event webcasting.  
  • John Pollard
    What advice would you give an association with 45,000 members, two annual conferences and declining meeting attendance? What if they had no new money for webcasting services or virtual event technology? And what if they’re convinced hybrid events are going to cannibalize their onsite attendance?  Stumped? Sound familiar? Then this webinar is for you.
  • Shane Tracy
    Is 2011 the year you’ve decided to put some portion of your conference online? You aren’t alone. Every week more multi-track, multi-day events take the plunge. Some quietly record every presentation, making them available to attendees after the event on-demand. Some live stream into a private portal for a remote audience. Some webcast only keynotes but share them far and wide through social media.  All however could save time, money and aspirin by making these 10 resolutions.
  • Eric Hards
    Lockheed Martin created a unique business and technology model for consistently producing live, high-production-value corporate webcasts for a national audience. Their approach not only eliminated any fear of going live with executive webcasts, but also led to a logarithmic growth in webcast production over the last 5 years.  Would you like to meet the man responsible for that successful enterprise streaming media strategy? 
  • Midori Connolly
    There’s lots of speaker training out there. And tons of resources for planning a great meeting. But when you host a hybrid meeting, how are you as the event professional going to prepare your speakers to be successful in a new, blended environment?  To date, there hasn’t been a ton of guidance to help position them to do their best in front of not one, but two live audiences – the one onsite and the one online. That is, until now. 
  • Emilie Barta
    Are you bending over backwards to keep your audience engaged at live events? Birds of a feather luncheons, breakout sessions, dynamic Q&A, informal networking – all are tried and true tactics to get on-site attendees talking. But what happens when your audience isn’t all on-site? Fail to give online attendees the same attention as those on-site and you put your event’s reputation at risk. It’s like inviting them to the party but not letting them past the velvet rope.
  • Erica St Angel
    Ah, the day after. With the conference behind you and kudos pouring in, it is tempting to simply archive the old website and turn your attention to next year. But wait.  Whether you webcasted live to a virtual audience or captured just a few keynotes for attendees to watch on-demand, there’s gold in that online catalog of multimedia presentations. Before you close the book on “Your Event 2010,” consider taking a fresh look at the content that was a year in the making.
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