How to Throw a Virtual Conference When You Have No Audience | Ep. #498

How to Throw a Virtual Conference When You Have No Audience | Ep. #498

In episode #498, Eric and Neil discuss how to throw a virtual conference when you don’t have a built-in audience. Tune in for tips and tricks for building an audience and making sure your information reaches the masses. Time-Stamped Show Notes: [00:27] Today’s Topic: How to Throw a Virtual Conference When You Have No Audience [00:37] When Eric attempted to throw a virtual conference a few years ago, he had no audience. [00:45] When throwing a conference, you must, first and foremost, set your goal or objective. [00:59] Eric reached out to a lot of people that he thought would be “smart”; he then had them record segments and let them blast their email lists. He made it easy for them to share the event with their social media following. [01:30] Eric made sure to make other people’s involvement as easy as possible, by fitting it around their schedules and workflow. [01:50] The end result was that they collected 6000 or so emails and sold a bunch of recordings of the conference for a total of about $5000. [02:15] Neil supports Eric’s method and says that you have to recruit popular people who will help bring in an audience. This doesn’t mean big names necessarily, but rather people with a big following and a long email list. [02:50] Also, go after companies that have a big following and offer them the opportunity to have a new platform. [03:10] Crowdcast is a great product to use for these virtual conferences (It worked for Eric, but it crashed when Neil pulled in too many viewers). [03:46] Google Hangouts has also worked for this type of venture, but you have to make sure that everything is well coordinated. [03:51] In this case, well coordinated means sending out email or social media blasts for each segment with enough headway to get viewers or hangout members. [04:05] To stay coordinated, use a scheduling tool like Buffer or Edgar for your social media channels. Paid ads work, as well. [04:29] Collecting email addresses is a forgotten, but necessary art. [04:35] Corporations are more likely than individuals to share their email lists, because they always want more publicity. [05:03] That’s it for today! [05:05] Eric and Neil recommend the Problem Solvers podcast, because there is an episode about Burrow, the Dollar Shave Club for couches. To listen go to singlegrain.com/solve. Leave some feedback: What should we talk about next? Please let us know in the comments below. Did you enjoy this episode? If so, please leave a short review. Connect with us: NeilPatel.com Quick Sprout Growth Everywhere Single Grain Twitter @neilpatel Twitter @ericosiu Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Episoder(3242)

The Luxury Era of The Creator Economy Has Arrived

The Luxury Era of The Creator Economy Has Arrived

Neil and Eric break down how TBPN scaled to $10M+ in podcast revenue with $300+ CPMs, 20 ads per episode, and high-value B2B sponsors, proving niche audiences can outperform massive reach. They debate...

12 Feb 20min

Where SEO Products Are Going

Where SEO Products Are Going

In this episode, Neil and Eric break down where SEO products are headed as AI automation accelerates, from on-page fixes and content creation to promotion, links, and social distribution. They explain...

11 Feb 23min

The AI Prompt That Writes $100k Sales And Email Copy For You

The AI Prompt That Writes $100k Sales And Email Copy For You

In this episode, hosts Neil and Eric break down how AI is changing copywriting, marketing, and hiring standards. They debate when AI helps versus when it creates lazy work, share real examples from hi...

10 Feb 21min

10 Business Moats That Actually Protect Your Marketing

10 Business Moats That Actually Protect Your Marketing

In this episode, hosts Neil and Eric break down 10 proven business moats that protect your marketing and drive long term growth. From switching costs and brand power to community, distribution, talent...

9 Feb 19min

The K-Shaped Future of Work

The K-Shaped Future of Work

In this episode, hosts Neil and Eric break down the K-shaped future of software engineering, marketing, and white-collar work in the age of AI. They explain why senior talent is winning while junior r...

5 Feb 20min

Revenue Per Employee Is Skyrocketing

Revenue Per Employee Is Skyrocketing

Neil and Eric break down why revenue per employee is exploding and what AI means for the future of work, education, and careers. They unpack ARR per FTE trends, why top companies need fewer people, an...

4 Feb 20min

This AI Finds Peoples Calendly And Books Sales Demos

This AI Finds Peoples Calendly And Books Sales Demos

Neil and Eric break down how AI is reshaping sales, hiring, and enterprise growth, from AI agents booking demos to why AI-driven outreach is making it harder to stand out. They dive into AI fluency, h...

3 Feb 25min

The True Economics & ROI of a Super Bowl Ad.

The True Economics & ROI of a Super Bowl Ad.

Neil and Eric break down the true economics and ROI of Super Bowl ads, explaining why they rarely make sense from a profit standpoint. They unpack real costs beyond the $7–10M media buy, debate short-...

2 Feb 25min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

stopp-verden
dine-penger-pengeradet
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
e24-podden
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
pengepodden-2
finansredaksjonen
pengesnakk
utbytte
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
rss-sunn-okonomi
okonomiamatorene
lederpodden
liberal-halvtime
rss-markedspuls-2
rss-investering-gjort-enkelt
rss-impressions-2