Why The Information didn’t settle for a virtual meeting platform
Before The Information could move the WTF Summit online, they needed to find a virtual event platform.
Amy Nichols, Vice President of The Information, wanted an easy-to-use, modern platform to host the WTF Summit. She was also searching for a platform that was much more than a virtual meeting.
Nichols explains that a great virtual event isn’t a single virtual meeting room.
Hopin’s multiple rooms created a “destination” for the WTF summit
While a virtual meeting platform gives you one virtual room, Hopin gives you multiple rooms with different capabilities. On Hopin, you can have:
- A reception room that attendees visit as soon as they enter the event;
- Multiple stages for keynotes;
- Breakout rooms where up to 20 people can talk and collaborate on video while hundreds watch and engage via chat;
- One-on-one networking rooms to build deeper relationships;
- And even an expo center where sponsors and partners can build a branded booth with on-demand or live video streaming.
Nichols says Hopin’s ability to allow numerous, branded rooms provided an experience and destination just like an in-person event.
The WTF summit took advantage of these rooms by creating one main stage for keynote sessions and multiple breakout rooms for sessions and panels. To fill the gaps between keynote and breakout room sessions, they set up one-on-one networking to give attendees the opportunity to meet new people in an intimate, virtual setting.
Shifting to a virtual event enhanced the WTF summit in two big ways
In 2020, many in-person events shifted to virtual events. While some event planners might consider this a downgrade, the WTF Summit benefited from the move.
On top of that, they snagged acclaimed speakers who they would not have been able to get for their in-person event.
We were able to secure speakers who normally might not be able to participate in an in-person event, because we had the luxury of being able to film sessions ahead of time.
The virtual WTF summit featured crowd-drawing names, such as:
- Sheryl Sandberg (COO of Facebook)
- Laurene Powell Jobs (Founder and President of Emerson Collective)
- Emily Weiss (Founder and CEO of Glossier)
- Jenna Lyons (Former President and Executive Creative Director at J. Crew Group)
And many more amazing, female business leaders.
For Nichols, Hopin’s networking feature stood out and made the WTF summit feel like an in-person event.
At the end of the event, Nichols says the WTF summit chat within Hopin blew up. Attendees praised the event and told The Information they had set the bar for virtual events.
It was cool to see so much instant feedback over chat with how happy people were. That was really rewarding as an event organizer