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Tips and ideas to help you maximise the value of interaction at your events.
Introduce interaction to your audience
Ensure your audience are confident using the interactive system by asking a simple 'ice-breaker' question before you begin your presentation.
Find out about your audience
Begin your presentation by asking your audience a series of demographic questions. This will enable you to compare audience feedback against criteria such as age, gender and region.
Example
This will enable you to assess trends in how men and women vote.
The results from the general question can be compared against other demographic data, such as age and profession, enabling you to build detailed demographic profiles.
Gain open and honest feedback from your audience
Allowing the audience to submit their feedback anonymously will give them the confidence to express their true opinions, increasing the quality of your feedback data.
Focus audience attention
Re-focus audience attention every time you begin a new topic. This can be done in a number of ways:
Tip: Participants will find it interesting to know how their opinions compare to the rest of the audience. Enable participants to submit their responses anonymously to gain honest and accurate feedback.
Explain results
Always explain or comment on results and use them to highlight your point.
Tip: Results can be used to instantly assess audience knowledge levels. If it is clear that participants have not fully understood a subject, find out why and go over it again.
Listen to the audience
Some feedback results may need further explanation. Asking the audience to offer an objective explanation or their opinions will ensure they remain involved and engaged in the subject.
Tip: Use the in-built microphone on the Communicator to facilitate instant Q&A and avoid the need for roving microphones at your event.
Actively involve the audience
In cases where complex issues need to be prioritised, brainstorm the issues with your audience and ask them to prioritise each one on a scale (e.g, 1-10). Issues can then be prioritised against another set of prioritised criteria, for example; risk versus impact, opportunity versus cost, priority versus performance etc.
The results can then be displayed live to the audience on a scatter chart, enabling you to instantly identify and focus on the most crucial issues with your audience.
Measure knowledge retention
Tip: Use speed scoring to display live results after every round. This will increase competition and create a lively and motivated atmosphere.
Break your audience into smaller groups
Promote teamwork by gathering feedback from groups brainstorming ideas outside of the main meeting room.
Download stored responses
Gather feedback from individual participants working outside of the main meeting room at their own pace. Their responses are stored in the memory of the Communicator keypads and can be downloaded at a later time.
Tip: During the morning session of your event - send individual participants outside of the main meeting room to answer questions. Download their responses from the Communicator during the lunch break and address/brainstorm them during the afternoon session.