Why hybrid is now standard
Pandemic-era virtual became baseline. Members expect the option. In-person-only excludes chapter members who live far away. Virtual-only loses the hallway-conversation serendipity. Hybrid splits the difference.
Planning principles
Design for the remote experience first. In-person quality rarely degrades when you optimize for remote; the reverse is not true.
Registration setup
Separate ticket types for in-person and virtual. Different prices. Different waivers (in-person requires venue waiver; virtual does not).
Streaming
Zoom Webinar or Vimeo OTT for the video layer. Private link sent to virtual registrants post-registration. On-demand recording available to all registrants for 30 days.
Networking
In-person handles itself. For virtual, set up structured 1:1 matching (Braindate, Airmeet) or topic-based chat rooms before and after sessions.
Speakers
If a speaker is remote, invest in good audio (condenser mic) and good lighting. Bad audio ruins the event for both audiences.
Post-event
Send recording links within 24 hours. Collect feedback separately from in-person and virtual attendees; the issues differ.
How Covey handles this
Covey registration supports separate in-person and virtual ticket types with different prices, waivers, and post-event email flows. Recording links, session survey, and attendance logging automate.