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Breakout rooom for Webinar

Jeverio
Listener

When I was the host for an MNC series of webinars on HVAC topics,  I was told that it is not advisable to have a breakout room as the audience may be too large to handle?

 

But when I tried it out during one of the webinars,  I noticed it is possible to do so but you need to prepare your breakout room in advance. You need to do some management of likeminded participant to ensure the audience do not get passive in their interactions.

 

Do share what are your strategies for keeping your breakout room engaged and participative especially for the shy Asian audiences.

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

The_WebiNerd
Attendee

You could start by not calling out and generalizing an entire continent's worth of cultures as shy, but...to your question...

 

Share more about your use case perhaps? Without knowing the function of your breakout rooms, duration and audience (aside from some of them being Asian), it's hard to give specific guidance. However...

 

Be sure to give clear directions and warn them of a report back. Have the groups designate a reporter that will speak to the findings of the group when the breakout rooms are over. Take time to discuss the purpose of having the breakout conversation before and after. Tease out the important learning in the process (which implies they are absolutely purposeful, of course). Provide clear expectations of the purpose, duration and what happens when they return (and if they FAIL!!! MWAUAHAHA! I'm obviously kidding - this never fails). Make your instructions crystal clear and use some sort of memorable guide posts for forgetful people like a number of things or an acronym - or share the instructions in chat which will follow them to the breakout room. 

Here's an example based off of an inclusion/diversity training we are managing:
Sample Instructions: "We're going to move you into breakout rooms in just a moment and there you will speak with about 10-15 of your colleagues and fellow participants. You will have just 3 minutes while you are there to find 3 things that you all have in common. That's it. Chat to us real fast if you have an questions. Just three things that you all either like to do, don't like to do, are, eat. What you can't say is that you all work for ____ or some other thing obvious. Maybe get a bit personal if you don't mind. Maybe you are all married or all single. Maybe all play sports. You decide. So, 10-15 people, you have 3 minutes to decide on 3 things you all share in common with one another. When we come back, we will share what you discovered in chat (or verbal depending on audience size). That's it. 3 things that your group has in common that everyone agrees on. Ready? Here we go"

Hope that helps you out some. Feel free to reach out to follow up. I check back here occasionally,. 

***Helping individuals and organizations gain success in their virtual and hybrid events. https://thewebinerd.com***

View solution in original post

4 REPLIES 4

The_WebiNerd
Attendee

You could start by not calling out and generalizing an entire continent's worth of cultures as shy, but...to your question...

 

Share more about your use case perhaps? Without knowing the function of your breakout rooms, duration and audience (aside from some of them being Asian), it's hard to give specific guidance. However...

 

Be sure to give clear directions and warn them of a report back. Have the groups designate a reporter that will speak to the findings of the group when the breakout rooms are over. Take time to discuss the purpose of having the breakout conversation before and after. Tease out the important learning in the process (which implies they are absolutely purposeful, of course). Provide clear expectations of the purpose, duration and what happens when they return (and if they FAIL!!! MWAUAHAHA! I'm obviously kidding - this never fails). Make your instructions crystal clear and use some sort of memorable guide posts for forgetful people like a number of things or an acronym - or share the instructions in chat which will follow them to the breakout room. 

Here's an example based off of an inclusion/diversity training we are managing:
Sample Instructions: "We're going to move you into breakout rooms in just a moment and there you will speak with about 10-15 of your colleagues and fellow participants. You will have just 3 minutes while you are there to find 3 things that you all have in common. That's it. Chat to us real fast if you have an questions. Just three things that you all either like to do, don't like to do, are, eat. What you can't say is that you all work for ____ or some other thing obvious. Maybe get a bit personal if you don't mind. Maybe you are all married or all single. Maybe all play sports. You decide. So, 10-15 people, you have 3 minutes to decide on 3 things you all share in common with one another. When we come back, we will share what you discovered in chat (or verbal depending on audience size). That's it. 3 things that your group has in common that everyone agrees on. Ready? Here we go"

Hope that helps you out some. Feel free to reach out to follow up. I check back here occasionally,. 

***Helping individuals and organizations gain success in their virtual and hybrid events. https://thewebinerd.com***

AnnaBH
Listener

I´m curious - can you use breakout room in a webinar as easy as you do in a zoom meeting? I wan´t to use them for coffebreak and maybe for companys to make advertising at a webinar.

Rupert
Community Champion | Customer
Community Champion | Customer

Hi @AnnaBH 

 

Breakout Rooms do not exist within Webinar. 

 

Webinar can have a Practice Session - and there will soon also be a "Backstage" feature - like a greenroom.

 

Hope this helps.

 

Rupert

 

 

What is the Backstage feature? Is it available yet? How do we access it? Thanks.

Carol @ ISTM