An Example of How to Integrate Twitter, Into an Event
An Example of How to Integrate Twitter, Into an Event

As an events management company, we are focused on making every BusyEvent as ROI-rich as possible.
The question our event producer and meeting planner clients always ask is “What can BusyEvent do to help me communicate more effectively with every participant in a meaningful and targeted way and in real time?”
Which is, in essence, the same question event participants (attendees, sponsors, vendors and speakers) have been asking, “How can I be part of the conversation, meet the people I need to meet and get from the event what I’m looking for?”
As part of our Event Bookmarking system, we are including a Twitter-capability that provides everyone with the ability to efficiently and quickly communicate with each other and doing so without changing their innate behaviors.
Imagine, if you will, the following scenario:
During online registration, registrants are asked for their Twitter name (not their password) and are given the option to “follow” the event’s Twitter account. The opt-in capability gives registrants the control they need and the BusyEvent registration system handles all of the requests seamlessly through the Twitter API.
Pre-event, organizers heavily promote “Follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/NAMEOFEVENT”. They send out “here’s who just registered” messages, “here’s who’s been added to speak”, “special discounts for the first 100 people to Tweet us with [[message]]”, “only 5 rooms left at the event price of $xxx at the [[hotel]]”, “be sure to complete your PURLs”, etc…
Once onsite, the “follow us on Twitter” message is EVERYWHERE; on the check in kiosk screens, on the schedule section of every badge, on the event staff shirts and the ‘swag bags’, on the sponsor signage, etc….
By integrating Twitter, we create a private communiations channel that secures the conversation to the approved group. In this private channel, people can blast messages to anyone ‘following and being followed’ in the approved group in an ongoing conversation. And, this private channel isn’t restricted to people attending the event; it can also extend to the virtual participant.
For those that can’t attend, but want to keep up with the event and were approved to do so, we can integrate the Twitter stream with a live video stream to provide a ‘you are there’ experience (we saw this at DEMO using Facebook’s real-time chat feature). In the future, virtual attendance could be a revenue stream, as well.
For those that are attending and want to participate in a casual way, we can integrate Twitter with the BusyEvent Digital Signage System, and sniff the Tweets in this private channel, projecting those messages and that conversation broadly for attendees to view.
By Tweeting things like “checkin on Level 3 is still open”, “open bar from 7-8pm sponsored by [[name of sponsor]]”, “keynote by [[speaker]] is starting in the Grand Ballroom”, event managers are able to effectively and quickly communicate with every participant in a way that improves the overall event, in real-time.
To comunicate with each participant, Twitter can be integrated with the BusyEvent Communications Profile System to micro-target certain sub-groups of people, or even individuals, for highly personalized messaging like “Come to Booth 123 for more information on our e-waste program” targeted at CIO’s, or, “Mr. Jones, your boss is trying to find you!”
The opportunities are endless and the above examples are just a few ways that organizers can integrate Twitter into the BusyEvent system pre and during the event.
Once the event concludes, and to extend the effectiveness of the event into a person’s “real life”, Tweets can be sent to remind participants to visit their PURLs (where attendees can go to download presentations, see who ‘bookmarked’ them, learn more about the people they met, etc…. ), lost-and-found information, targeted sponsors/speaker messaging based on the sessions the person attended (not that they were signed up for, but those they actually attended), etc…
If it gets to be too much, the participant simply ‘opts-out’ and obviously, over time, the messaging from the producer diminishes until they spin up their event for the next year.
The best part of all is that now the organizers can be included in the conversation and take actions immediately, rather than waiting for things to bubble over, causing them to be in reactionary mode.
Plus, the organizers also are able to more evenly deploy their resources and proactively communicate what’s going on.
In all, Twitter is becoming a permanent element of the way we run events and combined with the BusyEvent Communications Tools, is an invaluable and cost-effective channel to connect event attendees, get them involved in the event, improve their overall experience and create a real-time communications channel for organizers.
Great suggestion, great post
I’ve mostly been focusing on Facebook and have not done anything with Twitter yet. But after reading this, I can clearly see that I need to explore Twitter on a level I’d not given any thought to, at all. Thank you!
This is a great article and has sparked some ideas for me to present to a potential client.
Thank You!
Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/awynningevent
Great stuff. Lots of this info sharing going on ad hoc at #sxsw but neat to see it being integrated on the controlled event organizer’s side.
Great article — just RT’d…
Twitter’s great for some interactive processes but the service relies on the public internet and the availability of the Twitter servers (which went down recently). A benefit of Twitter is that for many people it requires no explanation as to how to use it. So it’s immediately accessible. Unfortunately this is not the case for the majority of people over 40 who may be excluded from the process. Whatever the interactive tool it’s essential that it is introduced correctly and that it is reliable.
Hi Nick . . . thanks for your comments. Since there are alternatives to Twitter (identi.ca, for example) I think what the focus needs to be is on the real time web and real-time information.
Our Event Bookmarking solution, for example, provides that in spades (http://www.tinyurl.com/EventBookmarking) and it gets around the ‘public internet’ and DDOS as well.
I will, however, take exception to your “over 40″ comment and here’s an example. Several thousand people just attended the ASAE 2009 conference in Toronto. Of the Top 20 Twitterers, 18 of them were “over 40″. It’s not the technology but as you say, the introduction and comfort with it, that is critical.