8 ways to improve your conference with Google tools
Andy
Wolber provides eight practical ways to use free Google tools for events and
conferences.
In November 1660, 12 people met at Gresham
College in London to talk about a common interest: science. The group met often
to discuss experiments and share ideas, and it eventually evolved in what we
now know as the Royal Society. (Notably, the Royal Society is also the
publisher of "the
oldest scientific journal in continuous publication.")
Much like conference-goers today, the Royal Society
consisted of people who gathered together as a result of a shared interest in a
topic. People gave talks, shared papers, and established social connections.
Unlike today, these early conference-goers relied on handwritten or printed
papers to organize and share ideas.
Thankfully, modern conference planners can
move beyond paper. We have access to the internet—and a whole host of free
Google tools to help manage events and conferences. Here are eight practical
ways to use these tools to support your conference activities.
1. Organize sessions
Organize and share your conference schedule
on either a Google Sheet or Calendar (Figure
A). For example, the organizers shared a
Google Sheet to display the schedule for an August 2015 EdTechTeam
North Carolina Summit. The Google
Developers Events calendar displays a wide-range of learning
opportunities, each with an "Add to calendar" link in the event
details.
2. Simplify search
Choose and publicize a standard hashtag for
the conference. For example, the Council of Michigan Foundations chose
#cmfac15 for their conference to be held in November 2015. That's
easy to remember: it includes the organization's initials (CMF), "ac"
for annual conference, then two digits to indicate the year. If you expect
thousands of guests—or the attendees are especially tech-savvy—you might choose
a hashtag for each conference track or session.
A hashtag makes it easier for people to
discover conference-related content and discussions (Figure B). Type the
hashtag "#cmfac15" in a Google search, and you'll see pages with
conference details. During the conference, a Google search for a conference
hashtag will also
display results from Twitter.
3. Link to Content
Gather and share workshop session content
online. Ask each presenter to provide either a file—or a link to content
online. Organize the files (e.g., PowerPoint presentations, PDFs, and other
documents) in conference folders with Google Drive. Share the folder so that
"anyone on the internet" can find and access the files. Add links to
content for a session in either a Google Sheet or Calendar event (as mentioned
in item 1).
4. Be social
Help people connect outside the conference.
Encourage each presenter to include contact information on a slide at both the
beginning and end of a presentation (Figure
C). For example, Alex Komoroske and Elisabeth Morant each
listed both a Google+ account and Twitter account on a title slide from their presentation for Google I/O 2015.
If your conference is relatively small, you might ask each attendee to add
their contact information to a shared Google Sheet.
Ask presenters and participants to include contact information on conference materials.
5. Take notes together
Create a Google Doc that anyone can edit to
help session attendees take notes for each session (Figure D). With
multiple people taking notes, details not found in session materials may be documented.
For example, the organizers of the 2015 Nonprofit Technology Conference shared a
shortlink to an editable Google Doc for every session of their conference on a
Google Sheet.
Share an editable Google Document to help attendees take notes together.
6. Livestream sessions
Stream your conference session live to YouTube with a
Hangout on Air (Figure
E). Your broadcast could be either the conventional
webinar-type format, where someone reviews shared slides, or a live broadcast
of a meeting or event. For an example of Hangouts used in a webinar format, see
"The Power of
Marketing with Google Apps," session presented as part of the
gCon 360° conference. Hangouts also allows the Mountain View
Whisman School District to stream school board meetings live and
make the video available for later viewing.
7. Share photos
Google Photos can help you document your
event. Install Google Photos on your Android
or Apple
smartphone, and set the app to
automatically backup photos you take to Google. Later, choose the
photos you want and share them with your colleagues.
8. Seek feedback
Create a Google Form to seek feedback—on
presenters, on sessions, or on any aspect of your event. Add your own questions
to create a new
Google Form—or search for Google Form
templates to modify. A search for "session evaluation" returns a useful
form by Christian Ohl, which you might then modify.
With all of these Google tools, you can share
your conference content far beyond your event's walls. Google's tools remove
barriers of cost and distance. It's up to you—and your conference
participants—to create an event worth sharing.
What other tips do you suggest for using
Google tools for events and conferences? Let us know in the discussion thread
below.
Source | http://www.techrepublic.com
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