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Planning Success: Discussion with Cullen Stack from Top 1% Mastermind

Planning Success: Discussion with Cullen Stack from Top 1% Mastermind

ViewStub sat down with Cullen Stack from Top 1% who has been working with Steve Patrick, one of the top roofing industry coaches in the United States. Cullen has done several highly successful events with ViewStub since April of 2020 – view the case study. Patrick VanDusen discusses how they were able to not only pivot to virtual for the first time, but also sellout those events using ViewStub as their virtual event provider.

The following is the transcript from that interview.

Top 1% Mastermind Event Stats:

  • 4 Events in a series
  • 309 Attendees
  • $154k Net Revenue

ViewStub: Can you tell us a little about Steve Patrick’s Top 1% and how they got started?

Cullen: My pleasure, Steve Patrick and his business partner Tony Rougas started Top 1% Coaching & Consulting in 2019. Steve was a contractor himself in the insurance restoration and roofing business in Texas. He partnered with Tony Rougas back in 2015, also successful in the appraisal and umpire space. They started an organization called Level the Playingfield (a Facebook group) to help contractors through their knowledge and wisdom from their many years in the industry.

After bringing in over 10,000 business owners to their group on Facebook, they started Top 1% out of demand from small companies asking them to speak at their events to help drive marketing and sales in the insurance restoration and roofing industry. At that point, they realized they were on to something. They created a business model to help everyone from the small business owner, the mom and pops to larger companies doing hundreds of millions a year in sales.

It’s been really cool to help them to build a brand and monetize their knowledge and wisdom. They love helping people, everyone has a talent and a skillset, and everyone has value. They’re passionate about bringing out that value out of other people in the insurance and roofing space.

 

ViewStub: Previous coaching events were in-person, but you’ve pivoted to virtual events once the virus hit. What were the steps you took to bring them online?

Cullen: Sure, they had been doing one-on-one coaching and speaking at tradeshows and conferences for decades. Top 1% was created in 2019 specifically for these events. We started watching it in December last year.

Then when March rolled around, we had events that we had contracted, paid deposits and booked in some of the major markets out on the road. We usually do 100 – 200 people (business owners) in-person events, educational seminars on GCO/MPE and umpire and appraisal. We were splitting them up, so we’d do one day GCO and MPE then we would do specific markets for the umpire and appraisal training.

I had the idea when this was going on, as we were making the decision to go virtual, I said why don’t we do a 2-day in-person event and bring massive value for attendees. Right about that time, we decided it’s not safe to travel with all that’s going on. We canceled the in-person event.

About that same time, we had connected with Patrick and Spencer at ViewStub and we put our heads together. In a week’s time we had put in the work to build it (the virtual event).

ViewStub: I liked how you guys jumped on board. The whole team was in it to try something new, and to adapt to the marketplace and still provide value to your audience and customers.

 

ViewStub: What were some of the challenges with setting up the structure of the virtual event and what are some of those things ViewStub help you do as well?

Cullen: Obviously, when you’re doing something new there are different timelines and you guys did a great job at communicating and helping us. We had a lot of concerns and questions – it was brand new territory; you don’t know what to expect. The main thing for us was just understanding how to live stream, what proper equipment is needed. I would recommend you do your homework, compare capabilities and components – not just costs but find out what works best as far as equipment. Then understanding how that fits in your budget.

Then it was having the capability to sell access to (what some would consider) a high-ticket live stream and still have the ability to connect and provide the information to the person who’s paying hard-earned money to attend the educational seminar. So, I would say the equipment is super important, then the communication between the organizer and ViewStub, and expressing our needs to you guys and making sure our demographic can use the technology. I’m big on having a story brand, having a vision and creative strategy in place.

Obviously, if it’s your first time it’s not going to be perfect. But put a little time and effort into creating the flow of the information you want to share. Especially if your event is only online and you’re live streaming (no one is there in person) they’re depending on you to relay the information to the best of your ability. That’s part of what they’re paying for is quality. So, having the format laid out really helped us.

We did it in a matter of weeks. As we were promoting it and generating sales and driving traffic to our landing page to sign up, we were doing equal parts with creating the event structure. We wanted attendees to be able to follow along with visuals to go with it.

 

ViewStub: Your marketing is some of the best we’ve seen for an event. Some people will have questions around this given the relatively high-ticket price for a conference and you were still able to pack the live stream event. What advice can you give for a lower end ticket conference to communicate the value of the event. What are some tips you can provide?

Cullen: Great question. I’ve spent 17 years in direct marketing and over a decade in digital. One thing I’ve learned is we all have customers and CRM (Client Relationship Management) tools to log emails, business cards and customer contacts. You should segment them as family, friends, prospects, hot leads, etc. A lot of people meet people and have money sitting in their cell phone and forget about it. I would say from guerilla marketing tactics to CRM tools, to creating a spread sheet if you don’t have a budget (to pay for a CRM tool) you can build a simple process for lead flow and pipeline.

Then figure out how you are going to follow up with them; putting them into an email drip campaign, nurturing them letting them know who you are, what you do and why you are the best. You don’t even need to be selling them, if you really care about someone, you see the value and you want the opportunity to transact and build a customer and drive revenue, then you’re going to do those steps. You’re going to reach out to them, you’re going to give them value and invest time. The people you want to connect with and are going to bring in are also people that you can learn from – not just them learn from you.

One of the techniques I would recommend is guerilla marketing style, look at your cell phone, look at your business cards, look at any and every pipeline that you have when it comes to organic lead gen, not just paid lead gen. That’s going to help you build out a bigger email drip campaign very inexpensively, then you can segment that based on X number of emails, X amount of people you want to touch.

You can do 100 at a time or 1000 at a time. Bite off what you can chew, process, present, communicate. If you have a team that can get on the phone and be relational, it’s going to drive more business, especially the higher the ticket, because people do want that customer service, they do want someone they can put a face to the name, that they can speak to and ask questions.

If they are spending $200 to $300 bucks on a product or service, usually they will want 5 to 10 minutes of your time. They will have a few questions for peace of mind that they know they are getting what they’re paying for. That’s a big tip is have customer service in line – not just through direct messaging and email.

Be relational, not transactional. If you can have a live customer service representative on the line during your business hours, I would say that definitely helps. So, customer service, email drip campaigns, and again look in your cell phone – there’s business in your phone. There are people in your phone that need your help and you haven’t followed up with them enough if they haven’t said “no thank you” or “let’s do it”.

Consider a CRM. Invest the money, there are great CRMs out there. Store all those leads, then hit ‘em with an email drip campaign.

What has been really successful for us, we go after the markets and demographics targeted for our niche. The more niche you are the more you are going to be able to offer your service and product for a higher price. Target your niche and learn how you can service customers in that niche. Run retargeting campaigns with landing pages and funnels targeted by who they are, what they do, and why they’re the best.

Then run an early bird special to drive urgency but show the full price (value of the event). What you’ll find is you will drive a lot of business at the very last minute. People procrastinate, they go on vacation, they live in their bubble. They will come in last week, in the last couple of days. You’ll get a lot of business in that last week. We all want more business at the beginning, not at the end, but you take it when you can get it.

What we’ve learned is by running more retargeting and saving our ad spend budget for paid ads in that last week and a half is really when you want to push it. Also, going back to the CRM it helps that Steve Patrick and Tony Rougas and Level the Playing Field and Top 1%, their coaching and consulting business, and even ViewStub has thousands of contacts they have put into their CRM, so we’ve utilized those contacts to make sales and drive revenue, to be a big component of that success.

We’ve had over 300 of people (show up between the four events). With that (success) came because we had a foundation, we had leads, we put them in a CRM, we put them in an email drip campaign.

All you need is an email on facebook and Instagram, now you can retarget or remarket just with that email address. Those are some tips to try for smaller budget or larger budget, to run a paid ad, run a drip campaign, building out lead flow and ideal prospects and a pipeline of people to engage with to sign up for their event.

Cullen Stack: Tips on Marketing Online Events

  • Consider investing in a CRM to help manage and nurture your leads.
  • Run retargeting campaigns with landing pages based on your sales funnels.
  • Drive urgency with an early bird special – show the full price (value of the event).
  • Focus on your retargeting campaigns early on. Save your ad spend budget for that last push 10 days before the event.

ViewStub: You guys knocked it out with your virtual events over the last few months, but are looking to move back to hybrid (in-person and virtual). What are your thoughts around that and how you will market and sell tickets for them?

Cullen: We’re ready as soon as people become comfortable for in-person events. If they told me 2 weeks from now, that I had 200 people that wanted to meet me to do an in-person event, I’d be there.

We’re ready, we’re excited. Steve and Tony’s core values at Top 1% is to help others. They love to get on stage, have a microphone in hand and have that elbow-to-elbow opportunity to answer questions. On the marketing side, we’re going to go after it aggressively.

There are other things we can put into play when we’re in person (at events). We can’t predict the future, but we’re hoping before the year is over, we’ll be able to get back to our live speaking events and giving people the option to do either (in-person or virtual) events. We’re excited, and we’ll be doing one or two (events) a month if we have it our way.

ViewStub: We’re excited to support you guys along the way. We love working with you guys. We appreciate you sharing some tips for our readers.

Connect with Cullen at Stack Sales @stack.sales on Instagram.

About ViewStub

ViewStub is a virtual and hybrid event platform that makes it easy for event organizers to sell tickets to live events or sell access to pre-recorded sessions right from their website. ViewStub‘s all-in-one platform offers ticketing, registration, video streaming and new revenue opportunities for creators seeking to monetize their content and grow their community.

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The Future of Hybrid Events in 2021

The Future of Hybrid Events in 2021

The world came to a screeching, near-stop in 2020. For safety’s sake, we all had to adapt to a new normal where live events were no longer a possibility.

It’s no surprise that technology has helped event organizers continue to host engaging events for their audiences.

Before the pandemic hit, virtual events were few and far between. Now they’ve become standard even for sports, entertainment, and professional events.

Translating events into digital environments can be tricky, but ViewStub makes virtual events easy for hosts and attendees. We know what it takes to host a professional virtual experience and have the features organizers need to monetize, promote and create branded experiences hosted on their own website.


Read on for our five predictions for hybrid and virtual events in 2021 and beyond.

1. Virtual Events Are Here to Stay

Even as more folks get vaccinated and case numbers go down, the pandemic isn’t over, and live events as they were pre-pandemic won’t be seen for a long time to come.

Event organizers have quickly evolved to hosting virtual events. They have overcome the learning curve and are realizing the previously overlooked benefits to live streaming video hosted events.

Over the last nine months, we’ve seen major progress with virtual events. They are more engaging, gaining higher attendance, and technology has evolved with them.

Virtual events open up new markets of attendees. People who live across the country and the world can enjoy your event without having to worry about traveling. Organizers can now market their events to a global audience for a minimal cost. They are no longer limited to their physical locations and venue capacities. With hybrid events, the reach is now infinite.

2. In-Person Events Will Make a Comeback

Nothing can replace the in-person interaction; but, until the pandemic is under control, organizers will need to have options for attendees with different preferences.

Hybrid ticketing will be key to offering flexibility for both virtual and in-person attendance. Organizers will seek virtual technology that can integrate with registration platforms to consolidate attendee data.

As venues open up again, live streamed event hosting will continue to provide a front and center experience for digital attendees. Complete customization of the video player through white label solutions will be an expectation providing a well branded experience for online events.

3. Hybrid Events Will Offer More Attendee Interaction

Gone are the days of live streaming an event from the back of a conference room. The key to success for virtual events is attendee interaction. Above all other factors, networking and engagement were one of the biggest challenges for organizers in 2020.

Despite this, more and more events are exploring new ways of interacting with remote attendees. There are now options to bring them “on stage” during the event for Q&A sessions and other easily-integrated activities.

Virtual attendees are able to interact one-on-one with the speaker, host or performer and include an option to make a donation within their virtual platform.

Another way to create engaging virtual events is to encourage attendees to connect in chat rooms. Chat rooms allow interaction with other attendees and with hosts, providing a space for conversation and appreciation.

Attendees will also be pleased with video-on-demand options that allow them to playback an event they might have missed.

4. Hybrid Event Platforms Will Continue to Evolve to Meet the Demands of Organizers

We all experienced a saturation of virtual events in 2020. Some were better than others. Organizers scrambled to convert their conferences and professional events, even sports and entertainment-focused events stepped up to the challenge.

But just hosting an event online isn’t enough. Today’s planners are looking to improve the virtual experience for attendees. They are planning the virtual and in-person experience in parallel. They are shifting away from the typical Zoom call type of event towards one that immerses all attendees in the experience.

Platforms that focus on the attendee experience, provide effective sponsorship opportunities, and allow full customization will prevail.

Many other specific features have surfaced, such as flexible ticketing. Organizers have pushed technology platforms to offer subscriptions, donation-based tickets, and even season pass tickets for their attendees. We expect to see many more robust features generated out of necessity.

Organizations will use virtual content to drive website traffic. Private label video players that allow seamless branding and customization will be a new channel for marketing professionals.

5. Event Budgets Will Increase to Accommodate Virtual Events

Nobody could have predicted the need for virtual events in 2020 budgets. Many professionals have seen the huge potential for bringing events into the digital sphere, and revised their strategy to invest in content creation and virtual events.

Now that organizers are allocating more of their marketing dollars to their virtual event experiences, they now have a chance to increase profitability. Hybrid event options will offer the potential to once again make the same margin of profits from in-person ticket prices.

In 2021, the Events Industry Will Be Redefined

We believe that in-person events will come back strong, but virtual attendance will continue to remain mainstream.

With hybrid event planning, both in-person and virtual attendees can be engaged in meaningful ways. Planners just need the right mindset and tools.

The transition from in-person to hybrid and virtual events has been jarring, but ViewStub is here to make hosting easier! Check out our solutions for ticketing, marketing, and streaming for virtual and hybrid events today.

About ViewStub

ViewStub is a virtual and hybrid event platform that makes it easy for event organizers to sell tickets to live events or sell access to pre-recorded sessions right from their website. ViewStub‘s all-in-one platform offers ticketing, registration, video streaming and new revenue opportunities for creators seeking to monetize their content and grow their community.

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5 Important Things to Consider For Hosting Virtual Events

5 Important Things to Consider For Hosting Virtual Events

Virtual event technology has been around for years. It became increasingly popular in the late 2000’s by offering a low-cost way to bring attendees together during the great recession. Today, virtual event technology serves a new purpose as the majority of the world continues to work remotely from home.

More and more organizations, small businesses, entertainers, sports teams, business coaches and associations have recognized the need to keep pushing their businesses forward. And virtual event platforms have paved the way to make it easier than ever to stream to a remote audience and monetize these events.

To help you start planning your virtual event, our team has compiled a list of the most important things to consider.

1. Identify Your Audience

What are their reasons for attending and consuming your content? Are they tech savvy or will they need explicit instructions to register and attend? What are their expectations? Are they expected to be entertained, or are they planning to learn from the event? Understanding their purpose for attending will help you create an experience that ensures your attendees reach their goals.

While the energy and excitement of being there live at an in-person event is much different in a virtual environment, there are several advantages. If your attendees are anticipating a learning experience, offer a playback option to view the event again at a later date – they can’t get that option from an in-person event. Or, if you are offering an entertainment experience, seek out a platform that allows attendees to view the event in the comfort of their living room on a smart TV. Regardless, make sure you highlight these amenities when promoting your event.

2. Determine Your Use Case

Now, what is your purpose for the event you are hosting? Here are some use case examples:

  • Events that are a product – sell attendance or membership
  • Events that build brand awareness or launch a product
  • Events that provide education – various sessions
  • Internal events – employee training, internal communication, town halls

Consider your goals for the event. You might be selling a product or maybe your event is the product you are selling, like a music festival or a sporting event. Either way, you can reduce the friction in the buying process by integrating payment options where it’s most relevant.

Maybe your event is used to connect with an audience and grow a brand. Virtual events are vital to keeping an audience engaged, even more so now with the decrease in travel. Consider a virtual event platform that offers customized event branding and quantifiable value to sponsors.

Additionally, the virtual option has helped organizers extend their reach by selling more tickets. They are no longer limited by the venue capacity. Plus, they can now capture more of the international audience, a previous challenge with in-person events.

3. Examine Different Virtual Formats

Until 2020, most organizers were largely unfamiliar with virtual events and their capabilities. However, the events world has evolved. Organizers are navigating between the different options for their events: live (in-person), virtual or hybrid. 

Hybrid events are fast becoming the preferred choice for events moving forward due to their potential to grow event reach. Just to be clear, hybrid events combine a live, in-person event with a virtual or online component. They offer the best of both worlds, as they just require adding a camera crew to the existing event. The benefit? They allow attendees to choose between the physical and virtual event destinations.

Perhaps one of the biggest shifts in the event planning mindset is considering the format for the virtual component of the event. Will a speaker engage on screen with the audience throughout? How will the audience engage during the event? Do you want online attendees to be able to explore different content on their own? These are all important things to consider as they will affect attendee engagement. Here’s the rundown of the basic format options:

Live Streaming: a live video broadcast of the event as it takes place. They provide exclusive access to content as the event unfolds. Consider how you want to deliver this experience, broadcasting from a studio (moderator in a news room setting) or live from a location, or are speakers at home? 

Webinars: a format where remote attendees tune in to listen. They are typically single sessions that can be broadcast live or on-demand. Make them engaging by allowing time for attendees to ask the speaker questions.

Panels and Forums: a format that involves multiple speakers who gather to discuss a topic. Consider how you want them displayed on screen. Make sure the technology highlights the speaker when they are talking. Allow attendees to interact with panelists through asking questions or participating in surveys.

Breakout and Networking Sessions: a format that segments groups for more targeted discussions and networking opportunities. Sessions can be live or pre-recorded and listed in a playlist for attendees to explore at their convenience.

Recommended Read: Virtual Event Formats – A comprehensive summary of the virtual event formats and how they match up with goals and objectives for different types of virtual and hybrid events.

4. Select Your Speakers or Virtual Host

Who will be the face of the event? Regardless of the event type, someone
will need to address the audience, transition into your different
sessions and keep the event on track. You can consider hiring a
professional speaker, or seek out the right person in-house. Whichever
the case, your event host should be comfortable speaking in front of an
audience as well as maintaining control of the agenda and timeline.

Speakers who are new to virtual events will benefit from a rehearsal.
They should know what to expect and how to anticipate common errors,
like reminding speakers to turn off mute to speak. A great host will
also keep your audience engaged during unexpected interruptions.

5. Choose a Virtual Hosting Platform

Now that you have defined your goals, your attendees’ goals and desired format to achieve them. You should have a complete list of your “must haves” and “deal breakers” to help you make the right choice.

Beyond the format for the event, there may be specific capabilities you will need to meet your goals. Here are a few:

Monetizing the Event  Seek out a provider that offers an integrated ticketing or registration solution. Another aspect to consider is a pay-per-view or on-demand options. Some organizers have created new revenue streams by offering access to key sessions for on-demand playback for attendees and their website visitors. 

While we’re talking about money, review the terms of payment. Some providers will take up to 30 days to release event earnings. Don’t be taken by surprise.

Event Branding  Get samples of event customization. Go beyond “putting your logo here”. Look for technology that allows you to customize banners, change the button colors and headline titles to match your brand. Consider a solution that offers white label video streaming. Branding capabilities can make the difference between a generic event and a cohesive brand experience.

Content Delivery  Consider the total package from the user perspective. Your provider should have a way to organize your content and sessions in an easy to navigate format. Some deliver a playlist that users can sort and find the desired content. 

Can you host the content on your own website? For most organizers, keeping visitors on their own website is important. Ask if your provider will allow you to host your event on your site, versus navigating to their site for viewing the event. 

Hybrid Transition  The virtual component for a hybrid event should be seamless. Providers that are experienced with hybrids will make this transition easy for the organizer. Whether your content will be live, on-demand or both, your provider should offer ideas to help you translate your agenda for your virtual audience. 

Choose a virtual platform that can offer both in-person and virtual ticketing and registration. A single solution streamlines the purchase process and ensures higher conversions. It also makes it much easier to manage from an organizer stand point.

For organizers, virtual events are now a key digital strategy for their organizations. While many are new to this technology, they are quickly finding new ways to engage their audience, build their brand and create new revenue streams.

About ViewStub

ViewStub is a virtual and hybrid event platform that makes it easy for event organizers to sell tickets to live events or sell access topre-recorded sessions right from their website. ViewStub‘s all-in-one platform offers ticketing, registration, video streaming and new revenue opportunities for creators seeking to monetize their content and grow their community.