The other night I was reading about generational studies in events. Organizers and exhibitors trying to cope with Generation Y, trying to encourage them to come to their conferences and exhibitions. Searching for answers to this generation’s abundant use of technology, short attention span, here-and-now mentality, and need for instant gratification. Finding a balance between Baby Boomers, Generation X and Generation Y.
Wait a minute. Where do I recognize this from?
When I look at my personal environment, such as my family, I see all sorts of age groups sharing space, life and interests. What would happen if I use my own family as an inspriration for events?
I know it is not a good idea to bring your work “back home”, but in this case it might just work. Not because I like to work from home (sorry family!), but because my home environment can bring inspiration to the workplace.
Take a family birthday a few weeks ago. Remote (phonecalls, emails) and live (parents, children, grandchildren) attendees. If I were to look at it as a “conference specialist” , we had a main conference, breakout sessions, catering breaks and a keynote speaker. Attended by at least 3 different generations, both online and face to face.
So what made it work?
Know your audience
Make sure you know who to expect at your party! Have plans for all age groups and interests, but remember that they are all coming to the event because of you, the topic, the cause. So don’t overdo your segmentation and leave room for improvisation, unconference. Small groups are pretty good in organizing themselves.
Find common ground
Even though our lifestyles can be very different, we all have someting in common. Our DNA, anyway. And just as in any other community that is formed around a topic, profession or interest, you do not get to choose the members. They form the group that shares your interest, and that is a great starting point. Be part of the community, and learn about them.
The young teach the old
New technology can be overwhelming, and use of tech tools changes every month. Let key users, the ones that were born after the birth of the internet, show you how they use it, and why. It helps to shape an event into a hybrid that all age groups can enjoy, with maybe shorter sessions and more Q&A. And more screen time…
The old teach the young
Learning from stories and experiences is so important. Talking to industry leaders and hearing about both best practices and failures, engaging in Q&A sessions ….. it makes younger attendees connect with the industry’s history, and be part of it. Share an experience. Bond.
Let’s face it: we live with different generations every single day, and catering for different age groups at events is in our system anyway. So pick your familiy: All in the Family, Married with Children, Modern Family… and transform it into a family meeting.
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