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Virtual conference best practices: What we’ve learned running hundreds of online events

A guide to best practices for virtual conference and meeting success in 2026. Read on for key strategies for more engaging meetings.
To run a virtual conference that consistently delivers measurable ROI and high attendee retention, organizations must integrate strategic planning, intentional engagement design, skilled facilitation, and structured post-event follow-up into a single cohesive methodology rather than treating each element as a separate checklist item.

Running a virtual conference that actually works, one that grows attendance, keeps people engaged, and gives your sponsors a reason to come back, is very achievable. We’ve done it across hundreds of events with organizations like CodePath, NARAL, UC Berkeley, and the United Nations. And here is what we’ve found works, and what most guides get wrong.


Start with a strategic foundation, not just a date

The single biggest differentiator between virtual conferences that perform and those that plateau is what happens before registration opens. Most teams start with logistics. The ones seeing 2-10X growth start with strategy.

Specifically, before we touch platform setup or speaker prep for any of our clients, we work through a Strategic Event Blueprint that defines the “why” behind every decision:

  • Specific, measurable objectives tied to real business outcomes (not vague goals like “increase engagement”)
  • Audience personas so content tracks are built around what attendees actually need
  • A success definition for 30 days post-event, not just day-of metrics
  • An integrated marketing timeline starting 8+ weeks before the event
  • Sponsor visibility strategy that answers their ROI questions before they ask
Planning variableCommon mistakeWhat we recommend
Objectives“More engagement”Specific KPIs tied to revenue or growth
Agenda designBack-to-back sessionsIntentional breaks and integration time built in
Marketing start date2 weeks before8+ weeks out, multi-channel and segmented
Post-event planSurvey + recording link30-day Retention Engineering sequence
Sponsor strategyLogo on the websiteLead data, booth design, qualified attendee targeting

The agenda itself is an experience design document. Attendees who receive detailed materials in advance arrive prepared rather than passive.

That shift alone changes the energy in every session. Once that blueprint exists, every downstream decision gets a lot easier to make, especially the one that shapes everything else.


The platform is the venue

Platform selection is the single most consequential technical decision in the entire process. The right one raises your engagement ceiling. The wrong one limits everything downstream, no matter how strong your content is.

We have tested and worked across more than a dozen virtual event platforms. And we have narrowed our recommendations down to a handful we have built streamlined setup processes around. Because of our agency relationships with these platforms, we save clients tens of hours of configuration time and pass along significant discounts, sometimes completely free software access. Clients regularly save 40-83% on platform costs working with us.

Platform needWhat to look forCommon miss
Multi-session eventsConcurrent session support, networking loungesUsing Zoom for anything beyond a single webinar
Sponsor visibilityVirtual booths, branded spaces, lead capturePlatforms with no native sponsor infrastructure
Global audiencesMultilingual captions, multi-timezone schedulingAssuming one time slot works for everyone
White-label brandingFull logo and color control, custom domainsPlatforms that stamp their brand on your registration
NetworkingAI matchmaking, speed networking, gamificationOpen lobby rooms with no structure or prompts

We also set up simulive sessions, pre-recorded but presented as live, for clients who want broadcast quality without live technical risk, while keeping chat and Q&A fully interactive. On the production side, we always ensure external microphones for every speaker, cameras at eye level, non-backlit lighting, and wired ethernet for anyone in a critical role.

These feel minor until something goes wrong in front of 500 live attendees. But here’s the thing: the right setup removes that risk. What it cannot do on its own is keep people in their seats.


Engagement has to be engineered in

That is the part most virtual conferences get wrong. Think about it: sessions where a presenter speaks for 45 minutes and opens for Q&A at the end consistently underperform on both retention and satisfaction.

Engagement needs to be designed into the structure from the beginning, not added as an afterthought.

Here is what we build into our clients’ events, and what each tool actually accomplishes:

Engagement toolWhat it achievesWhen we use it
Live pollsReal-time pulse; converts passive viewersEvery session longer than 20 minutes
Structured breakout roomsPeer connection; generates lasting relationshipsAny conference with networking goals
Speed networking roundsMore genuine connections in 30 min than a 3-hr open lobbyMulti-day or community-focused conferences
AI matchmakingPre-configured connections based on stated goals and interestsEvents where networking is a core deliverable
Gamification (points, leaderboards)Drives repeat engagement across sessions and daysMulti-day events, sponsorship-heavy conferences

Breakout rooms, when designed with a clear prompt, a designated note-taker, and a structured debrief back in the main session, are the single most-cited element in positive post-event feedback. When they are opened without structure, they are the most-cited frustration.

Encouraging attendees to turn on cameras works best when facilitators model it themselves and acknowledge participation in real time. Creating that environment where people want to be seen is not a technology problem. It is a facilitation problem. And the two roles are not interchangeable.


Facilitation is a skill, not an add-on

The facilitator is the person most responsible for whether the environment you designed actually feels real to attendees. Facilitation is a distinct skill from presenting. And we treat it that way, which means we always separate it from the person managing technical issues.

Facilitation practiceWhy it works
Opening with clear goals and normsSets tone; reduces friction from the first minute
Dedicated technical support (separate from facilitation)Protects the content experience when issues arise
Mid-session movement or reflection breaksFights cognitive fatigue; measurably improves retention
Inclusive facilitation techniquesAll participants contribute, not just the confident ones
Live captioning and accessibilityEnables global participation; multilingual captions at no extra cost on several of our platforms

When one person tries to facilitate and troubleshoot simultaneously, the content experience suffers the moment anything goes sideways. For conferences running longer than 90 minutes, we build mandatory breaks into the run of show; not as padding, but because the brain processes information poorly past that threshold without a reset.

Retention does not start after the event. It starts inside every session, and it extends well past the moment the livestream closes.


Post-event is where most of the value gets left behind

Most virtual conferences end when the recording goes live. That is one of the most expensive habits in the events industry.

Research consistently shows people forget up to 90% of what they hear within a week without intentional reinforcement, which means a conference with no post-event system is, functionally, a conference where most of the content investment quietly disappears.

Our Retention Engineering approach builds structured touchpoints that carry attendees forward:

  1. Day 1: Personal follow-up linking what attendees said they wanted to what they actually experienced
  2. Days 2-3: Curated resources based on session attendance and engagement behavior
  3. Week 1: Strategic introductions and implementation coaching based on stated interests
  4. Weeks 2-4: Guided conversations, replay content, and exclusive follow-up experiences
  5. Days 30-90: Clear continuity so attendees carry the event’s impact into their work
What most conferences doWhat we do
Send recording linkPersonalized Key Takeaways Dashboard by attendance behavior
Email a generic surveyBehavioral data that feeds directly into next year’s strategy
Hope sponsors renewLead quality data with engagement scores and attribution
Nothing at Day 7Structured re-engagement with implementation support

Case in point: CodePath grew qualified sponsor leads by 919% in a single event, from 5,131 to 52,304. It is also why NARAL's board described their summit as one that left them "completely ecstatic."

The post-event system is not an add-on. It is where the conference’s real value gets realized, and it only works when it is connected to a coherent methodology from the very start.


One team, one method, one set of results

That coherence is the actual differentiator. When strategy, marketing, production, and post-event engagement are handled by one integrated team with a shared methodology, results compound. When split across vendors with no shared vision, the experience fractures, and no amount of great content fixes a disjointed execution.

ApproachTypical outcome
Multiple disconnected vendorsInconsistent experience; vendor conflict; 100+ extra coordination hours
Internal team onlyCapability ceiling in production, marketing, and post-event engagement
Platform-only solutionSoftware without strategy produces average results
Full-service partner using the SMART Event Method2-10X attendance; broadcast-quality production; measurable ROI across every format; 89% client retention

If you’re looking for deeper strategy around audience engagement, ROI attribution, and post-event follow-up systems that extend your impact long after the event ends, We & Goliath was built for exactly that.

Our team works across every format, from virtual to hybrid to in-person, with 500+ events of experience behind every recommendation. The SMART Event Method (Strategy, Marketing, Attendee Experience, Returns, and Transformation) combines data-driven strategy, broadcast-quality production, and integrated marketing to turn your events into measurable business results, whatever your goals.

The free Virtual Conference Strategy Session is where that conversation starts.

Get your free virtual conference strategy session

If audience engagement, ROI attribution, or post-event follow-up are areas where your current approach has gaps, this session is built for that conversation.

In roughly two hours, we’ll deliver platform recommendations, format guidance, and a production roadmap grounded in 500+ events across virtual, hybrid, and in-person formats, so you go into your next event with a strategy that holds up past the live date.

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We & Goliath

We & Goliath is an award-winning, top 100 worldwide event agency known for increasing conference attendance by 7X and profits by 3X through beautifully designed virtual, hybrid, and in-person events. Since 1999, their team of innovative strategists and creative designers has worked with global enterprises, SMBs, non-profits, and other organizations to engage audiences and exceed expectations.

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