In this episode you see how we went about planning content, networking, and entertainment in order to build the best possible attendee experience (both in person and online).
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>> Why do people go to B2B events?
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>> To learn.
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>> To network.
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>> To spend company money.
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>> And what is the worst part of B2B events?
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The sessions.
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Going alone.
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The entertainment.
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>> What if people loved the sessions?
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And what if we helped them meet people?
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And what if the entertainment made them want to stay?
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[MUSIC]
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>> He's a god genius.
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>> Now sleep down.
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>> We're playing.
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>> We're right there.
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>> Yeah.
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>> So you have to- >> Nice drag it.
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>> No, there's a go back.
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>> This thing is so wonky, dude.
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>> You don't tap it, you drag and scroll.
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>> Here's our way, man.
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Let's go.
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>> We'll do all the driving.
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So please don't touch the steering wheel or
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pedals during your ride at sea.
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>> I've been to a lot of B2B events throughout my career.
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And the worst part is typically the content.
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It just feels like it's not vetted.
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It's not super valuable.
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It's the same recycled messaging.
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It's the same speakers on every circuit, a lot of its product pitches.
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So at goal now where we vetted everything, we made sure that it was going to be
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high
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impact high value for our attendees.
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>> I guess you have a holistic view of what we're ice and pee.
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>> We didn't come up with like the biggest influencers,
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bring them in and figure out what they were going to talk about.
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We built the track and then we went out and we found the best people who
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could deliver the information that we were trying to help people with.
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It's the people that are going to be able to teach that concept the best.
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>> Yeah, it's a content first approach to event landing.
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Yeah, we made the content, we found the right person for it.
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>> COVID completely reinvented the event marketing playbook.
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One of the things we learned after the pandemic is that people don't travel to
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events just for content anymore.
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They expect to be able to join a live stream or watch the sessions after the
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show is over.
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People will travel to be part of an experience.
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And yet so many events today are still focused on the old pre-pandemic
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execution playbooks that are over-indexed on content optimized for
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in-person attendance and bragging rights associated with filling up conference
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halls.
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>> What are you most excited about for today?
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>> To be honest, it's the people here.
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The people here are spectacular.
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I mean, all these people that we've been creating with from afar come together
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and
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then also it's a killer location.
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>> I feel like I'm bumping shoulders with people I've seen on LinkedIn give
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incredible thought leadership.
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Like I'm in the room with the people that I want to learn from in real time and
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actually like shaking their hands, asking them questions.
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So I think it's just like bringing the right people together in like a super
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cool venue is just sort of creating the environment where I think a lot of
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knowledge is going to get shared and I'm excited about it.
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>> The conference agenda has to balance both inspiration and education.
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And while there's no hard and fast rule around this,
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the intention for the keynote stage is around inspiration while most of the
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education happens in the breakouts and you can't have one or the other as
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independently they're not enough.
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Find speakers for your keynote stage that validate your strategic narrative and
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inspire your audience.
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Be extremely thoughtful with breakouts to ensure that attendees can leave with
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tangible best practices that they can't get anywhere else.
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At Golden Hour, we wanted to feature industry veterans on our keynote stage
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who can help us validate our claim that the old marketing playbook no longer
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works.
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>> You know, attribution I think is a waste of time.
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It's never going to happen.
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>> [LAUGH]
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>> We wanted to spotlight innovative use cases of marketers who are finding
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success executing the new playbook for audience marketing.
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>> Say, ask yourselves what would happen if the community development of
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Peloton and the incredible home demand part of Peloton met the Netflix side.
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>> And we wanted our audience to hear from CMOs, CEOs, and even board members
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that
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they are right to challenge the current status quo in our practice.
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>> A whole bunch of CMOs begin marketing, reach out when we did the budget cut
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soon years ago, asking should we cut back, cut ground or cut demand, cut this,
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cut out, and it's a forced dichotomy.
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>> And we wanted to feature voices from outside of our industry,
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in our case, the creator economy to help inspire new ideas.
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>> Creators are going to have the ability to earn either cash from the
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businesses
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as they drive sales, but also earn in tech when he with businesses.
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>> Everybody wants that instantaneous fix because we've been fed performance
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marketing for the last few years.
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>> Your goal with the breakouts is to make sure that everyone leaves feeling
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like they could tactically implement what they learned in those sessions.
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At Golden Hour, we organized the afternoon into three separate tracks.
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We called it production, distribution, and outcomes, which mapped pretty nicely
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to our strategic narrative around the future of marketing.
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Production was all about the new playbook for content marketing,
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which we believe is a central pillar of owned media.
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Distribution is all about demand creation,
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how marketers can compete for the attention of their buyer audience in order
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to generate pipeline, and outcomes is all about impact.
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How to prove the impact of the new marketing playbook on revenue.
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Unlike our keynote sessions, which were about 25 minutes in length,
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we changed the format of the breakouts into 45 minute workshops,
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and found speakers who are willing to go much deeper into the content than
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traditional sessions.
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>> Hit a speak, but mostly learn how we can engage our customers,
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how we can learn from the best out creative video,
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how we learn the best of distribution.
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So I'm taking notes all day long.
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>> The other main reason people attend events in person is the human connection
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To meet someone, the otherwise wouldn't have met,
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that could help them advance in their careers.
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Now, not everyone at your conference is an extrovert who loves working the show
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floor.
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But all of your attendees are human beings who are attending with a desire to
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belong,
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to connect, to network.
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>> I've never been to a conference alone.
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I've always had someone to kind of anchor onto.
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So I'm just feeling a little nervous.
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I'm gonna have to introduce myself a lot today to people who don't know me.
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But hey, that's the name of the founder game, right?
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I think there's some kind of hit show on.
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[MUSIC]
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Just stepping outside for a second because I think I'm realizing how much of an
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introvert I am.
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A lot of wrapping shoulders in there.
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All right, I'm going back.
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>> Personally, I'm an introvert.
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I don't get a ton of energy working the show floor.
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But I know that so many people do.
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So with Golden Hour, we wanted to create an onsite experience that curated
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relationship
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building for both introvert and extrovert alike.
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We created this structured networking moment at the happy hour that gave
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attendees who
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wanted to participate a compelling reason to approach each other to discuss a
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certain topic.
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We invested in what we're calling mind, body, and soul activations, including
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an optional
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group workout in the morning, and even a quiet room just off the show floor.
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You need to create approachable networking opportunities for any and all of
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your attendees.
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For example, we wanted to be highly intentional about giving attendees access
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to the speakers.
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And we did this by placing a speaker at each table during lunch so attendees
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could interface
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with whichever speaker resonated with them.
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This allowed attendees to build relationship and network with the speakers
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rather than
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a one-way engagement from the stage to the audience.
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There is great power for brands who are able to curate a shared experience that
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's exclusive
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to their onsite attendees.
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Whether that means hosting an after party at a unique venue or booking a
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musical act
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or whatever else may come to mind, these moments can forge real relationships
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with your attendees
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that long outlast their time onsite together at your conference.
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Seven years later, and I still get comments from members of the customer
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success community
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from our 90s-themed Pulse after party on the USS Hornet aircraft carrier.
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A big opportunity at Golden Hour was afforded to us with the venue that we
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selected.
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It was the rooftop where we continued the lunch experience at dinner by sitting
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family
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style with a beautiful unobstructed view of the Manhattan skyline.
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Dinners are this weird thing at B2B conferences that are exclusive only to VIPs
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or speakers
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or whatever.
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We flipped that concept on its head and hosted a seated dinner for everyone as
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a primary
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focal point for attending in person.
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And since we named the event Golden Hour, we knew we wanted to do something
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special at
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sunset.
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One of the worst parts about conferences is the entertainment.
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Most people go and get their free drink and immediately go offsite to do
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something else.
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You need to ensure that people remain onsite and are engaged by creating a
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memorable experience
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that's better than something they can go off and do on their own.
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I had this vision of a musical performance on the rooftop at Golden Hour
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overlooking the
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Manhattan skyline.
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The only question was how can we find a talent that we can work with within our
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budget?
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We had been filming an emo marketing video of a yellow card song.
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He posted that he wanted a violinist who could do a backflip on camera.
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And more than a dozen people responded and said "Lenzi Sterling."
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Lindsey Sterling was perfectly aligned to our vision for owned media.
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She's a renowned violinist, she's a dancer, and she built her own audience on
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YouTube
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and now sells out arenas and concert venues.
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It was one of those mental pictures that I just couldn't shake.
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Sunset, rooftop, overlooking Manhattan at Golden Hour with incredible acoustic
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violin
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to mark the moment.
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That's how we landed on Lindsey.
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You're here.
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Please make sure it's clear before exiting.
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Just a little bit.
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That is nice.
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The old way of live streaming conferences was to effectively hit the record
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button on the
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camera on the back of the general session room and let it run.
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But the virtual event craze of 2020 and 2021 taught us that our attention spans
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at home
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are much different than they are in the room.
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And the best of breed conferences are producing a parallel digital experience
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that is optimized
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for the online viewer, creating a more inclusive attendee experience for those
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who can't travel,
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and ultimately enabling marketers to cast a wider net of conversion into their
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own audience
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of subscribers.
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If we learned anything from the pandemic, it's that people don't want to sit at
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home and
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watch 30-minute panels on their laptops.
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So our ambition for Golden Hour was to create a digital experience that was
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optimized for
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the digital viewer.
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It would be hosted.
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It would feature expert commentary from VIP marketers, almost like the NFL Game
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Day or
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TNT halftime show for those who are familiar.
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We'd host exclusive interviews with on-stage presenters and we'd create other
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dedicated
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content just for the digital viewer.
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I like to redesign websites for a generation that needs a voice at the table.
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And that's Gen Z website redesigns that I did for Audience Plus and then the
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other company
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that wants it.
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What's up all my Golden Hour friends?
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It's your boy Kyle, aka the Rizzler, here to do another website Gen Z redesign.
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This time it's for Audience Plus, let's take a look at this H1 right off the
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bat.
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Your audience is cooked AF bro, manifest, stack views and convert then run it
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back again
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young books.
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It's giving trauma and big Pisces energy.
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You know right now I think this is the biggest creative risk that we're taking
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because in
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effect we're hosting two events at the same time with a very small team.
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