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VIRTUAL EVENTS FROM UNISFAIR
Recreating the Value of Live Conferences Without the Bother and Expense of Getting There
By Ronni T. Marshak, December 13, 2007
NETTING IT OUT
Unisfair provides a virtual environment which mimics the venues and capabilities
of live conferences, trade shows, and job fairs. These events can be real-time,
with live presenters and booth personnel, followed by a time period when all
information is available on demand for viewing. Events can also be purely live
or purely on demand.
Using a template-based approach to design an event, event sponsors, working
with Unisfair professionals, can personalize the templates and add multimedia
content. Within the showcase venue (trade show floor), booth sponsors can
customize the look and the content available within the booth using an easy-to-use
design wizard.
Participants can attend sessions, both in real time and on demand, downloading
all relevant information, such as presentation slides, collateral material,
and virtual business cards into a briefcase, which can be easily downloaded.
All participant activity is tracked, providing event coordinators and booth
sponsors with detailed metrics on such activities as who attended what sessions,
what questions were asked, and what information was downloaded.
In a time when travel has become too expensive for many organizations, and
people have limited time to devote to these types of events, the Unisfair
solution should appeal to organizations looking to spread their messages
and encourage professional networking among their customers.
STANDARD CONFERENCE/TRADE SHOW ATTRACTIONS
Think about the last trade show you attended. What attracted you the most?
The conference sessions and presentations? The exhibit hall booths? The opportunity
to network with your peers? The great parties? For me, it was “all
of the above.”
Now think about the worst part of attending. For me, it was the long flights,
the hotel stay, not having “my stuff” available, missing important
events at home, overindulging at those parties, and the hit to my company’s
budget to pay for me to be there.
And have any of you ever planned/hosted a conference or sponsored an exhibit
floor booth? The good part was educating attendees on the topics at hand,
getting your marketing messages across, getting qualified sales leads, and
meeting all sorts of potential and existing customers (not to mention those
parties).
The downside? The cost. The personnel investment. And you never know what might
muck up your success. Bad weather usually means low attendance. The soaring
costs of travel and restricted budgets many companies have instituted further
reduce attendance. And then there are the frustrated attendees who didn’t
get to see everything they hoped to see and who are stuck with suitcases
full of PowerPoint presentations, brochures, business cards, and other forms
of collateral materials. Finally, at the conference, you may be able to tell
how many people attended a session or visited a booth, but you don’t
have detailed information on who they all are, how long they stayed, what
materials they picked up, and who asked what questions.
Virtual Attendance
Founded in 2000, Unisfair, backed by Sequoia Capital, is headquartered in Menlo
Park, California, with R&D in Tel-Aviv, Israel. The company is trying
to make it easier for (primarily) B2B businesses to put on large-scale events,
with multiple educational sessions and tracks, trade-show floor booths, networking
opportunities, and other sponsored activities. Taking advantage of advances
in virtual environments and online collaboration technologies, combined with
the willingness—nay, eagerness—of business people to interact
via online professional networking, Unisfair offers a multimedia environment
for hosting, participating in, and attending virtual events, applying the
benefits of collaboration, social networking, and virtual environments to
business gatherings (think Webex + LinkedIn + Secondlife).
Types of Events
The Unisfair environment is being used by different clients to offer different
types of events, primarily marketing and recruitment events.
MARKETING EVENTS. This is the traditional conference model, designed for increasing
brand awareness, lead generation, and improving current customer relationships
and loyalty. Companies such as Quest Software, Cognos, and National Instruments
are using the Unisfair environment to conduct lead-generation events.
RECRUITMENT EVENTS. Unisfair also provides an environment for job fairs or
higher-education recruitment events. Virtual job fairs have proven successful
in competitive industries such as health care, financial services, and retail,
and in global recruiting efforts in industries like oil and gas and high
tech.
COLLABORATIVE PROFESSIONAL NETWORKING ENVIRONMENTS. Clients, such as Cisco,
have worked with Unisfair to take advantage of the virtual event capabilities
to create both real-time and persistent professional communities for information
sharing and networking. The Cisco application provides the virtual environment
to enable its 40,000 global channel partners to meet and exchange information
with application providers and device manufacturers.
Real Time and Persistent
Most virtual events that leverage the Unisfair environment are actually live,
with “manned” booths and real-time presentations. Just like a
physical event, attendees can ask questions, enter into conversations, and
get help as they participate.
But past the live event date, the conference is available in on-demand mode
for a period of time determined by the event sponsor. All content is still
available and questions/help/etc. can be conducted with asynchronous messaging
(such as email).
Target Customers
Unisfair targets B2B organizations for its solution. Originally, media organizations,
such as CMP, McGraw-Hill, and Penton Media, were the primary target segment
for Unisfair. And this is still a very lucrative audience for the company.
But large corporations such as Cisco, IBM, Cognos, RIM, National Instruments,
and Quest Software are also using the system for their own virtual events
to drive revenue and generate qualified business leads.
DESIGNING YOUR EVENT
Multiple Venues (Marketing Events)
Unisfair Virtual Events provide all the same facilities of a physical event.
These include:
• A Main Hall, which is the navigation point to other venues and which
can include sponsor branding.
• A Conference Hall, where participants can attend keynote presentations,
panel discussions, tutorials, and other conference sessions.
• An Exhibition Hall with branded, interactive vendor booths.
• A Resource Center of general (not booth specific) downloadable material.
• Professional networking lounges are designed to foster interactions among
attendees when the event organizer wants this type of professional networking
capabilities,
such as participating in open forums and public and private chats.
These venues are shown in Illustration 1.
The Multiple Venues of a Virtual Event

© 2007 Unisfair
Illustration 1. A virtual event mirrors the venues of a physical event, using
graphical depiction to great effect. In this illustration, the Quest Exchange
Virtual Trade Show, sponsored by Quest Software, the Main Hall (the greeting
and navigation starting point), the Conference Hall, the Exhibition Hall, and
the Resource Center are shown. This event did not offer a lounge area for professional
networking. The lounge depicted is a generic illustration provided by Unisfair.
Note that navigation is available from all venues via the left-side navigation
panel. Also note that a list of current online attendees is also available
at all times.
Template-Based Environment
Unisfair offers a number of predefined event templates, each of which offer
the same basic venues and features, but which have different looks. (See
Illustration 2.)
Templates for Different Looks

© 2007 Unisfair
Illustration
2. Three different templates for event design. The first in the general
Unisfair format; second
is the format used by National Instruments
for the company’s Automated Test Summit; the third is an upcoming new
UI to be available soon.
The templates provide a variety of categories from which the conference sponsor
can choose what features, venues, and content is offered. The templates can
be used out-of-the-box with some minor tweaking (putting in the proper logos,
etc.) or they can be heavily customized. At this point, even the minor tweaking
requires working with the Unisfair professional “event manager” staff.
We’d like to see the basic ability to add logos and to do other minor
customizations to be made available as a high-level function that doesn’t
require Unisfair’s involvement. The company is planning to provide
an open API to accept client design elements in the near future. This will
help with real design modifications, but we’d still prefer a very easy,
straightforward way to personalize an event on the most basic level.
BEST PRACTICES IN EVENT DESIGN AND PLANNING. Unisfair does point out the advantages
of working with the event manager. The company has done more than 400 events
and knows what works and what doesn’t. Providing this best practices
advice is invaluable, even for clients who are in the event planning business
or have run events extensively in the past; although they may know how to
run exquisite physical events, there are new and different challenges when
bringing an event online.
Creating the Event Content
UPLOADING CONTENT IN THE CONFERENCE HALL AND RESOURCE CENTER. The event sponsor
can upload any type of file—text, PowerPoint, video, audio, etc.—and
can use Unisfair’s Webcast functionality, which also handles streaming
video formats and product demonstrations via shared desktop capabilities.
Remember that events can be both real time (synchronous) or persistent (asynchronous).
And some capabilities, such as shared desktops and live demos, are only available
during a live session.
During live sessions, you can do “Simulive” presentations; these
combine prerecorded (and, therefore, editable) presentations with live presenters
or moderators who are on hand to support real-time Q&A.
POPULATING THE EXHIBITION HALL BOOTHS. Booth content (and design) is handled
by the individual booth sponsors without requiring any interaction with the
sponsor or Unisfair. The environment includes a Booth Wizard, which is an
easy-to-use, step-by-step, fill-in-the-blanks application with which booth
sponsors can define the following:
• The look of their booth (template, colors, design elements such as logos,
and messaging which can be constant or can change based on time or activity in
the booth)
• Content, uploading the information on products and downloadable collateral
information
• A list of representatives (booth personnel) who are responsible for responding
to visitor inquiries, both in real time (during live events) and afterwards
when the event is available in an on-demand mode
• Reports and statistics, which provide management of the booth sponsor
to have a complete record of who visited the booth, what information was downloaded,
and transcripts of interactions with representatives
This report continues...
To read the full report: http://dx.doi.org/10.1571/pp12-13-07cc
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