What will the post-pandemic hangover feel like?

Image credit: Pixabay

As we wind our way through this meandering pandemic, deal with our various forms of isolation and divergent governmental policies, there is one thing we can all agree on: we all recognize that the digital tools and platforms are and will be absolutely vital. For many people, there’s been an awakening to the range of possibilities online, with the rise of new tools and ways to connect and communicate. This pandemic period has brought about an accelerated digital transformation for many laggard companies and unsuspecting management teams. For others, meanwhile, the massive surge in use of online tools has provoked a backlash and a craving for a return to the physical In-Real-Life (IRL). Aside from legacy thinking that says that work can only get done when in a physical office, many people people are suffering from loneliness and mental health conditions despite the digital tools. An existential question arises:

Is it part of the human condition to need to be present and congregate physically?

It depends…

The fact of the matter is that there is no single solution or answer to the question. It will depend on a number of factors, such as your culture, sector and, at more granular level, what types of projects you are working on. Whether you go 100% distributed (i.e. fully online) or keep with the in-presence physical offline, it will be on a scale and each company will need to find its balance. In a post-pandemic world — which won’t be normal or really resemble that which we knew in the past — a blended existence will surely be the new standard. With agility and flexibility, we’ll each need to come up with a blended solution between off- and online, analogue and digital.

In a post-pandemic world, a blended existence will surely be the new standard.#newnormal #blended #humancondition Click To Tweet

Kaleidoscopic vision

In this future seamlessly blended existence, I liken it to the feeling of looking through a kaleidoscope. As we twist and turn through our day, new patterns will emerge, with the dots and colours layering, blurring and interacting with one another. Online/digital will interplay with the physical/analogue.

Image credit: Pixabay

Soon enough we will stop talking about digital marketing and digital transformation. It will be just plain marketing and transformation. THIS will be our new normal. Whereas in the past we marketers talked about social media marketing and e-commerce, we’re going to see the mixture of off- and online overlap and bleed into all spheres of life and business. For example, as I’ve written in the past, there will be blended marketing, education, retail and networking. To wit, new terms have emerged over the last decade, such as hybridity, phygital and digitail, as coined by Nicolas Bordas.

The phygital in retail: digitail

Looking at the notion of retail commerce, digitail is where retailers are selling via a combination of online and offline channels, where the smartphone, social media and a raft of other technologies (AR, VR, big data, AI…) are an integral part of the blended shopping experience. [Please check out my infographic on digitail here.] For each activity, we’ll need to find the right suite of technologies to make our business futureproof. For communications and marketing, we’ll need to remain agile as platforms come and go, in and out of fashion, depending on the organization and client base with which you’re dealing.

The future of conferences and events

With my main profession being speaking at conferences and events, I’ve naturally had to migrate to giving talks on Zoom/Bluejeans/Teams… etc. But, there will be a time when the subject of the CV-19 virus will move from the main windshield to the rear-view mirror. In what shape will events and conferences re-emerge?

Re-inventing the old

In that post-pandemic life, it seems that we are bound to carry with us certain lessons. With the arrival of the Covid-19 pandemic, we’ve all experienced massive change. Digital has been slingshot into every organization in ways that might have taken years to do had we all been left to our regular devices (ie. pre-pandemic). We’ve discovered that business can be done without being in an office. We don’t necessarily need to fly around the world to conduct meetings IRL. In the process, we’re saving time, money and fossil fuels. As much as many of us have made strides in the digitalization of our business, though, it seems to me that the improvement in online events has not kept apace. So, how to make the online conferences and events better? I believe part of the answer lies in a tried & true practice from traditional television: the studio audience. Just as marketing has had to reinvent itself, in part by returning to old-fashioned notions of localization, personalization and customer centricity, I see online events and conferences borrowing from the old TV model.

I can say that as a speaker, it makes a great difference to have the option to interact with a full-body live audience. It doesn’t need to be a large audience in the studio, but enough to gauge and interact with. Then, all the other attendees can zoom in from afar. As the compression technologies, bandwidth, infrastructure and equipment improves, it will be exciting to see the opportunities via holograms. I was fortunate enough to trial the state of the art with Musion 3D Events (powered by Haivision). They have developed the ability to capture and distribute very high resolution (4K) through the Internet and to do so in real time, with real-life interaction. Below you can see me interacting with some pals on another stage…. Who’s real, who’s a hologram?

Photo credit: Tiffany St James; Dave Birss on guitar

It’s really very impressive IRL. Check out this Musion video on Vimeo:

Dan Olsen interactive hologram performs live and simultaneously in two locations from Musion Events on Vimeo.

I see the future of great events as being blended. Obviously, there will be a need to democratize certain technologies and nothing replaces good content and delivery. But, the future of conferences, events and, even entertainment, will inevitably be blended or phygital. Think of televised sporting events. It’s already blended in a more rudimentary fashion. An online audience can watch the live event streamed, while others are attending locally. Similarly, but in reverse, television shows stream out to a larger group of spectators with a live audience on hand in the studio. In both cases, the event can be broadcast at a later date and yet keep the “live” feeling.

Hopefully, you are ready for the hair of the dog and will ride out this pandemic hangover! I, for one, am excited by the options and opportunities for the new phygital experiences ahead.

What are your thoughts on the future of events and conferences? Please do comment and share!

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