Good HR practice within the meetings and events industry – navigating today’s challenges
Next in our series of guest editors, we'd like to introduce HR expert Kate Goodman, a member of the CIPD and a Mental Health First...
One of the biggest challenges for event organisers at the moment is how to improve engagement at their conferences, meetings and events. Gamification is increasing being used, but what are the benefits, particularly in this hybrid world that we now find ourselves in?
As always, objectives need to be set and the programme designed accordingly, but why not make learning fun and different. The goals need to connect with the content and collect relevant data, as well as improving the user experience.
One organiser who tested their audience’s knowledge before the event and then afterwards, found that 97% of people who started the gamification session finished it, and 30 days later 90%+ of the knowledge was retained. This was far higher than when gamification hadn’t been used.
Particularly successful examples of the use of gamification are for sales training and product launches.
The gamification element can be played individually or in teams, so attendees connect and network with other people. It could be used to encourage attendance at future or recurring events as an ongoing competition or ‘re-match’ if scoring is used.
Planners who have introduced gamification say that there are many advantages to using a game format that is designed specifically for the audience:
Measurements can be in place to assess the success of introducing gamification:
The data that gamification can provide:
And this can be used for:
Introducing gaming strategies and techniques to conferences, meetings and events does have advantages, particularly data collection and insights in to delegate behaviour, but the key is that it has a well defined strategy behind it and it improves the user experience.
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