How Bots Are Making Event Planning A Breeze

Discover how bots can help to manage all stages of the event process.

Last Updated: November 15, 2022

Tom Gibby, Co-founder and CMO, The Bot Platform, deep dives into how you can use automation tools to help ease the strain of event planning. He identifies the key issues for teams during the planning process and provides digital solutions to these challenges.

The last few years have seen a lot of change for businesses that have become habitual. In-person, events have shifted to the realm of the virtual, and with the pandemic becoming background noise and real-life events steadily back on the rise, the way businesses approach the planning of company events (and indeed the way they interact with staff) has undergone a foundational shift. Companies have relied on virtual communication tools to plan events and effectively communicate with their distributed teams. Internal communication channels like Microsoft Teams and Workplace By Meta have become essential tools for nearly all companies.

Through this shift borne through necessity, many companies have found an unexpected boon that has made dialoguing with staff easier and planning corporate events a breeze. Staff engagement has never been more dynamic, large chunks of time devoted to banal but necessary admin has been liberated and productivity has surged.

What is the cause of this corporate revolution?

Bots. 

Bots provide targeted automated communications that augment the planning and operations of events. Event assistants and apps can integrate with the channel’s staff are already using (such as Microsoft Teams and Workplace) and become game changers for both virtual and in-person events planning and managing.

Hosting a big corporate event (virtual or IRL) can often feel like Herculean labor: a myriad of communication types need to occur before, after, and during the event to a host of different people. Then there’s the liaison with speakers, logistical and tech set up along with health and safety requirements, and there is always the odd unforeseen issue that can pop up at the last minute.

Using bots can streamline the event planning process and drastically improve a company’s comms and marketing strategy to remove major pain points and repetitive tasks. The company-tailored comms that bots provide engage the attendees and allow more time to be dedicated to creating a premier experience that otherwise would be spent on back-and-forth planning on building the event. Bots can ensure you completely control all your known functions and help you react quickly, and be adaptable to any unknown developments that should arise. 

Streamlining all comms data in a single channel makes information easier to follow and prevents the confusion that often arises when communication is divested across multiple channels. Many communications issues arise when information systems are built (often unwittingly) into a 1-way system or lecture-style communication method. To foster true and healthy interaction, a 2-way communications system is needed. One that fosters engagement and allows insights to be brought to the fore that previously may have remained buried. According to Markletic, 49%Opens a new window of marketers say that audience engagement is the biggest contributing factor to having a successful event. Bespoke bots built into a single comms channel breathe life into the information flow and promote a healthy and efficient interchange that promotes engagement.

See More: 3 New Ideas to Market Virtual Events in a Post-COVID World

Bots can help to manage all stages of the event process

Pre-event they can:

  • Send broadcasts about the upcoming event.
  • Automatically answer FAQs, which are often many before the event, particularly in these post-COVID times we live in. Having FAQs prepared and automated can save a huge amount of time; these can cover a broad range of queries—everything from dietary requirements to the speaker’s schedule. 
  • Creating surveys so solutions and insights can be brought to the attention of the organizers to create a better experience. For example, what speaker people would most like to have involved, what is the audience’s preferred time for a keynote speech, and so on. 

During the event, bots can help by sending broadcasts that welcome attendees and send alerts throughout the conference when things are happening – for example when the bar is open or the raffle starts in 15 minutes etc. The event can be made to be more interactive and engaging by updating attendees about any developments and by providing details about etiquette (particularly important for virtual events). You can run polls or ask questions during the event to increase interaction with the audience and ensure people are dialed in and as engaged as possible. 

Post-event bots can:

  • Gather feedback on how the event went and find out ways to improve. What were the most popular segments or speakers? Whom should we book next time? 
  • Share clips and video footage of the event as a follow-up or send bonus content to attendees.
  • Reinforce key messages from the event and outline steps about how to proceed in the immediate future.

Bots are changing the way events are planned and the nature of events. By delivering the communication augmentation features listed above, attendee engagement has never been higher. 

In a world increasingly virtual, events run on tools like Teams are just as prevalent as IRL events, and here, bots provide seamless one-channel information exchange without the need for a dedicated host or HR involvement which can take up large chunks of time. Users can instantly gain event information as simple as picking up their phone and messaging a friend. There is access to information 24/7 as bots work around the clock configuring different time zones and can be tailored to an individual’s preferences and working hours.  

True and lasting improvement can be achieved through surveys conducted through your Event Assistant Bot. Getting the big picture and understanding how and why improvements should be made is all too often an elusive enterprise when using several communication streams and when there are mountains of manual admin to do. Quality feedback can often be an afterthought without the ability to measure and integrate into pre-existing systems.

An Event Assistant Bot can save you time and money and boost the engagement and success of your event. Time and money that would otherwise be consumed in the tedium of manually answering questions and the mechanics of conveying information is now freed up. 

Have you tried using bots to simplify the event planning process in your organization? Share with us on FacebookOpens a new window , TwitterOpens a new window , and LinkedInOpens a new window . We’d love to know!

Image source: Shutterstock

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Tom Gibby
Tom Gibby

Co-founder and CMO, The Bot Platform

Tom Gibby is the Co-Founder and CMO of The Bot Platform, a no-code enterprise software solution that empowers people to build a better employee experience on internal communication channels such as Microsoft Teams and Workplace from Facebook. They are a winner of the EE Awards’ Employee Engagement Vendor of the Year, Webby Awards Honouree and member of the Department for International Trade’s UK Start Up program.
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