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Engaging delegates for interactive experience

Trav­el is recog­nised as an impor­tant ele­ment in con­fer­ence suc­cess, but for one group of del­e­gates attend­ing a cus­tomer ser­vice con­fer­ence last year, it was much, much more.

The atten­dees, all staff from Chiltern Rail­ways, found them­selves divid­ed into teams and told to trav­el to the event in Leam­ing­ton Spa by dif­fer­ent train routes. They were instruct­ed on how to buy their tick­et and which con­nec­tions to take. They were giv­en dig­i­tal cam­eras, a set of tasks and infor­ma­tion to col­late into a five-minute pre­sen­ta­tion.

Dale Par­menter, man­ag­ing direc­tor of DRP Group, the events con­sul­tan­cy that organ­ised the con­fer­ence, explains: “The teams were giv­en delib­er­ate­ly tight time­frames for their trav­el so they arrived at the con­fer­ence frus­trat­ed, late and keen to share their expe­ri­ences of being a com­muter. By putting del­e­gates into the shoes of the com­muter, they direct­ly engaged with the issues.

“The fol­low­ing month, all the short-term ‘quick fix­es’ to improve cus­tomer ser­vice across the Chiltern line were imple­ment­ed, result­ing in a 85 per cent decrease in cus­tomer com­plaints.”

We’ve had a peri­od of see­ing tech­nol­o­gy for technology’s sake used with­in con­fer­enc­ing

It was an object les­son in how engag­ing del­e­gates can pro­duce far bet­ter results than the “death by Pow­er­Point” pre­sen­ta­tion, and an exam­ple of how it’s not just tech­nol­o­gy that can engage and moti­vate con­fer­ence atten­dees.

“We’ve had a peri­od of see­ing tech­nol­o­gy for technology’s sake used with­in con­fer­enc­ing,” says Tim Leighton, cre­ative strat­e­gy direc­tor at Jack Mor­ton World­wide, a brand expe­ri­ence agency. “Holo­gram speak­ers, pro­jec­tion 3D map­ping, and oth­er light­ing and visu­al tech­niques cre­ate a wow fac­tor, but may not engage the delegate’s needs. For brands, such as Eric­s­son, we focus on cre­at­ing envi­ron­ments and event for­mats that stim­u­late ideas, encour­age con­ver­sa­tion and tap into the actu­al needs of a par­tic­u­lar audi­ence.”

Even chang­ing the seat­ing lay­out of a con­fer­ence can make an audi­ence feel more engaged, says Mr Par­menter. “If you seat 1,000 peo­ple in the round, you can ensure that nobody is more than five rows away from the pre­sen­ter. Some­times we sim­ply remove all the fur­ni­ture from sem­i­nar rooms so that every­one is on their feet and inter­act­ing.”

Adding Val­ue, an events agency that works for, among oth­ers, Peu­geot, Canon and Kasper­sky Lab, uses tech­niques such as the Human Spec­tro­graph, where del­e­gates are asked to move to a part of the hall depend­ing on their opin­ion of a cer­tain sub­ject.

“It gets an audi­ence up and active, and allows the client to take the tem­per­a­ture of the room,” says Ran­dle Stonier, Adding Value’s chief exec­u­tive.

Not that tech­nol­o­gy can­not be used effec­tive­ly to engage inter­est. XL Events, a pro­duc­tion sup­port com­pa­ny that spe­cialis­es in tech­nol­o­gy, are work­ing on new pre­sen­ta­tion tech­niques that will keep audi­ences wideawake.

“We now have the abil­i­ty to place inter­ac­tive sur­faces with­in 3D pro­jec­tions,” says David Mulc­ahy, XL Events’ tech­ni­cal direc­tor. “In oth­er words, you could have a spin­ning holo­graph­ic cube on stage with a web­page on each of its sides show­ing infor­ma­tion or del­e­gate feed­back, which can be inter­act­ed with just like a touch­screen.”

Crys­tal Inter­ac­tive, an audi­ence engage­ment con­sul­tan­cy, helps con­fer­ence plan­ners make their events more inter­ac­tive by incor­po­rat­ing every­day tech­nol­o­gy, such as iPads, into the pro­gramme.

“Con­fer­ence del­e­gates expect the same lev­el of engage­ment and inter­ac­tiv­i­ty as they expe­ri­ence in oth­er areas of their lives,” says Chris Elmitt, Crys­tal Interactive’s man­ag­ing direc­tor. “We achieve this by a blend of tech­nol­o­gy and audi­ence inter­ac­tion tech­niques.”