Hybrid conferences—with simultaneous in-person and virtual attendees—have consolidated as a standard format. But managing two audiences with different needs at the same event presents unique challenges in ticketing, access, and experience. This guide addresses how to do it right.
Two products, one event
In-person and virtual tickets are different products that should be treated as such.
- Differentiated pricing: in-person has costs that virtual doesn't
- Clear benefits: what each modality includes (networking, recordings, materials)
- Separate capacity: limited physical capacity, virtual can be unlimited
- Specific communications: relevant information for each type of attendee
Hybrid ticket pricing
Finding the right price for each modality requires balancing perceived value and costs.
- Premium in-person: 100% of price, includes complete experience
- Standard virtual: 30-50% of in-person price
- Combo: in-person + access to recordings afterwards
- Upgrades: allow virtual to upgrade to in-person if there's capacity
Dual access management
Each modality has its own access system that must work in parallel.
- In-person: QR or physical accreditation, validation at access points
- Virtual: email with unique link, access to streaming platform
- Verification: prevent one virtual ticket from being used multiple times
- Support: team prepared to resolve incidents of both types
Virtual attendee experience
The virtual attendee is not a passive viewer. Design an experience that justifies the price.
- Interaction: chat, questions to the speaker, live polls
- Virtual networking: video rooms to connect with other attendees
- Exclusive content: backstage interviews, downloadable materials
- Recordings: subsequent access to review sessions
Specific metrics for hybrids
The success of a hybrid event is measured differently than a purely in-person one.
- Actual attendance vs registered: separated by modality
- Viewing time: virtual attendee engagement
- Interactions: questions, chat, poll participation
- Satisfaction: separate NPS for each modality
- Conversion: virtuals who become in-person the following year
Conclusion
Hybrid conferences are not simply adding a camera to an in-person event. They require designing two differentiated experiences that complement each other, with specific ticketing, access, and metrics for each. Do it well and you'll multiply your audience without sacrificing the quality of either experience.