There are three main traditional communication channels that most companies regularly use to promote their events, be they physical or virtual: email, social, and website.
Let’s go through them to see how to use them best if we want to amplify webinar distribution and attract the right audience with the ultimate goal of either raising brand awareness or getting more leads.
Using emails for webinar distribution is probably something we all already do. In all honesty, it’s probably also what we would normally rely on to get most of our webinar subscribers.
We have, however, a couple of tips to ensure that it becomes a reliable source of leads:
Social media is a good way to engage with your community of followers, especially if your goal is brand awareness. Let’s go through the main actions you’ll be taking on social media to promote your virtual event:
Leveraging your website is really important if you want to increase traffic and have people engage with it and your content.
So, again, who do you want to talk to?
Based on the main topic of your webinar, you're gonna be selecting the right, relevant pages on your website to actively promote your webinar: this could be just using simple banners on your home page or on specific pages with pop-ups, but it can also be more than that. It all depends on what you want to achieve.
For example, you can promote it on your blog and highlight it, but you can also add a CTA that links to your live webinar within existing articles. You can do the same thing in-app, too, and you're gonna be segmenting toward who you want to reach.
Even with all those traditional promotion channels and all the best practices one can gather to make the most of them, it's becoming harder and harder to promote webinars. More and more companies are doing webinars, and the quest for attention is real.
Paid advertising does work when you want to get people to join webinars, but it does come at a cost, obviously. This is not to say that you should exclude it altogether, but there is a way for you to cover quite a bit of those costs by using your own employees.
When we go one step back and look at the numbers, we see that:
On average, the overall network of company employees is at least 10x larger than a company's follower base (Source: LinkedIn Business).
Nearly 64% of advocates in a formal program credited employee advocacy with attracting and developing new businesses (Source: Hinge Research Institute & Social Media Today).
We typically see that because of the trustworthiness of those employees, they also convert better in later stages of the funnel.
Companies can get up to more than 5x greater reach when messages are shared by employees (Source: Hinge Marketing).
We always talk about reach as a bit of a vanity metric, but you need reach. It starts with reach, and then it becomes about conversions, clicks, obviously, subscribers, and then what converts into leads and new business.
It's not just about expanding the reach on social media; it’s also about reaching the right audience to do that. As a company, you want to build that credibility and build that brand trust, and the power of personal recommendation, as we like to call it, is really crucial to attract the right people.
On the Ambassify platform, the Affiliate campaign enables you to share a specific content piece with your community that contains an individual tracking link unique to each member of your Ambassify community. This link allows you to track the number of clicks and interactions the content piece receives.
Practically speaking, what happens is your ambassadors just click on the LinkedIn button, and the webinar promotional post is automatically shared on LinkedIn. More importantly, through conversion pixels, you can automatically and completely track the performance of those posts via the Ambassify platform (and see who brought in new subscribers into the webinar).
Alternatively, the Referral campaign allows your advocates to refer someone by filling in their contact details and/or sharing a referral link. When you share the referral link, the receiver will have to fill in their contact details themselves.
While an Affiliate campaign requires the page you are sharing to contain the tracking code, a Referral does not.
These campaigns are typically used, of course, for webinars but also to build your customer base, recruit new team members, etc.