We partnered up with Guest of a Guest, the authority on chic events, to share some insider tricks to help you get the most out of your event with video marketing. Read on to learn how you can get your event noticed, increase registration and attendance, and keep people engaged with your content long after the event is over.
Table of Contents
Before the Event
According to Vidyard’s recent webinar, video content can raise on-page event registrations, by up to 80%. Here are a few ideas for videos you can leverage ahead of your event to garner interest and encourage registration:
Teaser videos
Teaser videos are a great way to get people excited about your event. A teaser video should be short, fun, and keep people guessing. The goal is to capture attention and intrigue people to check back to learn more. Here’s an example of a teaser video we created for a past industry mixer event of our own:
Speaker Intros
If you have speakers slotted into your event, check to see if they have relevant existing video content from their past speaking engagements. Sharing this content ahead of your event, in addition to your agenda and topic descriptions, will help potential attendees see the value that your speakers will bring.
Past Event Recap
A compelling and upbeat video of a past event can help potential registrants visualize what your event will look like, and motivate them to sign up to attend.
During the Event
During the event is a great chance to capture various types of original video content for different marketing objectives and uses. It goes without saying, that it’s better to get too much footage than not enough. The more footage you get at your events, the more creative ways you can mix and match the content to suit various platforms. Here are a few ideas to get you started:
Event Recap Footage
Capturing footage of the event itself is a great way to drive attendance to future events. Your videographer should capture what makes your event unique, whether it’s the great speakers, professional development and networking, an exciting product launch, or simply a fun time.
Quick interviews with attendees can fit in well here too — why did they decide to attend the event and what did they enjoy most about it?
Here’s an example of an event recap from the Young Collectors Council gathering at the Guggenheim museum in NYC, a Guest of a Guest event filmed by Veed.me:
Customer Testimonials
Certain types of events, such as trade shows, open-houses, and conferences are a great chance to interact with your customers in person. It’s also the perfect opportunity to capture them on camera saying nice things about your company. Different from in-depth polished testimonial videos, your objective at events should be to get quick sound bites. You can later group these short clips by industry, role, or specific type of problem solved.
Event Speaker Sessions
You should make it a habit to always record the content presented at your events, regardless if it’s a large event with numerous speakers and sessions or a small event with just one presentation. And if the speaker is an employee or executive from your company, this is also your chance to position them as an industry thought leader.
After the Event
Phew! Your event is wrapped up. Take a moment to pat yourself on the back for a job well done, but don’t stop now, you need to keep the momentum going.
You used video content to attract event attendees and maintain their attention. Now, your job is to make sure your event video content lives on long after the actual event.
Here are some suggestions on how to do that:
Leverage Your Event Recap Video
Send a follow-up email with your event recap video. Upload the clip natively on your social media platforms, keeping in mind what’s most effective on each one. You can also use this content to promote future events.
Gate Useful Content to Generate Leads
You have a few options for what to do with the speaker or presentation videos from your event. A proven content marketing strategy is to gate educational content to generate leads. You can also break the videos into shorter clips and leverage them on your social networks as teasers for the full video. Be sure that you’re posting your content in the right places to get maximum ROI: Video Marketing Platforms: When YouTube is Not Enough, and ROI is Everything.
Repurpose the Video Content
Just like other videos and content pieces, event footage can be repurposed in various ways.
Once your video content is transcribed and broken down into shorter clips, you can use your new written and visual content in various ways to stretch the life of your video(s), improve SEO rankings, target your audience in better ways, increase distribution, and get more eyes on your content. Some ideas and inspiration here: 9 Effective Ways to Repurpose Your Video Content Like a Pro.
Summing Up
- When leveraged correctly, videos can be a marketer’s best friend for driving event awareness, attendance, and engagement.
- Use existing video content and short custom videos to create buzz and excitement ahead of your event.
- Creating videos during the event is all about taking advantage of the crowd and atmosphere to build your video content library.
- After the event, you want to leverage the great video content captured at the event to keep the momentum going and your customers engaged.