Your venue is booked. Your speaker lineup is set. Your tickets are selling. It looks like you have everything set up for a successful event.
Except you might be missing a huge opportunity.
From keynote addresses to in-depth panels, your event is a content goldmine. Your event should be providing a ton of valuable insights to attendees, but you can also share that value with a larger audience by repurposing and remixing your event’s sessions into sharable online content. The basic premise is based off of Gary V’s Content Pyramid: You take one piece of major “pillar content,” and strategically adapt it into multiple smaller pieces of content. An hour long video of an interview could be adapted into several shorter videos, a blog post, a podcast, and dozens of social media graphics and video clips. Instead of having one piece of content for one audience, you have multiple pieces of content that can reach a much wider audience. And you never know which of these will catch fire online and be the thing to propel your brand to the next level.
Here are a few ideas on how to create a content plan for your event in a way that will help build your brand, grow your audience, and promote your next event.
If you have a virtual event or a hybrid event, then your sessions should be set up for high quality livestreams with great audio and video. Make sure you are recording, archiving, and backing up each session. But if your event is in-person only, you still should record as much as you can in as high quality as you can. This extra investment will pay off in the amount of content you can derive from having recorded keynotes, sessions, and panels.
But don’t stop there. You can get creative. If your event has a show floor, take a video tour. Interview key speakers or reps from vendor booths. Get reactions from your attendees. You might not use every single thing you record, but it’s much better to have more and decide to use less later than having too little and wishing you had more.
With so much changing in the landscape of social media, blog posts can feel a bit old school. But they are still vital for SEO and promoting your event. Having high quality blog posts about your event can really help your organic marketing. There are a few ways you can translate your event into blog posts.
If you have audio files of your sessions, you can repurpose them as podcasts. From 2018-2020, the ATX Television Festival published their event’s panels as a weekly podcast called the TV Campfire. For the best presentation, record a short intro with a brief theme song or audio logo that reinforces your event’s branding and entices the listener as to what value they’ll get out of listening to this session.
Other ways you can translate your event’s content into podcasts: create thematic episodes (if a theme of your event is leadership, edit together the best clips on leadership from different sessions). If you interviewed key speakers, publish that audio as a podcast.
The same principles for publishing podcasts apply to YouTube or other video platforms: you can publish the videos of your sessions to YouTube or bonus interviews with special guests. Be sure to properly brand each video with an intro, graphics package, and a prompt to the viewer to subscribe. If your event has a show floor, you could post a video tour of the floor, or do quick highlights of prominent booths.
Here’s where you can get really creative and get the most bang for your buck when it comes to translating your event into content. If you’re following our plan, you have videos and transcriptions of everything at your event, and you’ve gone through it to pick out the best quotes and most illuminating ideas from your event. Now you can turn those nuggets of wisdom or memorable moments into social media content.
You now have a bevy of content from your event. Congrats! But do not just publish it all at once. Yes, you will want to release a lot of content around the dates of your event, but you also want to stay relevant throughout the year. Come up with a schedule that makes sure you can maintain a steady and consistent release of content. Your content strategy should look something like this:
Using this strategy is a great way to get even more of a return on your investment and help your event's message reach an even bigger audience.