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5 Ways to Incorporate Equity into Your Virtual Events

While virtual experiences continue to be the only way we can connect with our supporters during this pandemic, many organizations are wondering what more they can do to incorporate equity into their events. Don’t let this powerful principle live in the HR manual—in this article, I provide five ways to incorporate equity in your virtual events.

Be “the Microphone,” not “the Voice”

I’ve always felt discomfort when reading “we are the voice” statements from organizations, as in “we are the voice for the voiceless,” “we are the voice for the poor,” “the voice for the children.”

What I always want to say in response is that no one is voiceless – they are just unheard. The people in your programs already have a voice – their own voice – but they don’t have the platform – or the microphone – to be heard, listened to, and truly understood.

Your virtual events should showcase speakers from different backgrounds and lived experiences. It is very important to evaluate other voices – right now and always – and to draw attention to multiple perspectives.

If you are hosting a panel, you should aim for diversity on that panel in a variety of dimensions (race, gender, age, ability, etc.). If you have guest speakers participate in an educational series you are facilitating, make sure they also come from different backgrounds.

If you are a small organization and used to only running events with your own staff, then you may not have enough representation. In this case, I recommend you turn to your partner organizations or others in your network. Provide them a platform to be heard and compensate them for their time and expertise. Which brings me to my next point…

Be a Collaborator, not just a Creator

Use your platform to invite leaders from other organizations or experts in related areas to talk about their work. You do not need to be the definitive resource on all topics. Harness the wisdom and resources others have created.

If you don’t have enough representation in your organization to host a dialogue on racial equity, consider sending a book or article to participants written by a recognized expert and facilitate a debrief around that material instead.

If there are other dimensions to your work that your organization does not specialize in, invite your partners and related experts to present on those. You don’t need to be the subject expert—your greatest offering may be your access to experts and the platform you have to connect them to your audiences.

Again, I recommend that you offer to compensate all guest experts who devote time and energy to your virtual event. If funds don’t exist for compensation, this is a great ask to a corporate sponsor, who will understand the need and get valuable exposure to their brand. Some people will decline a fee or will accept an honorarium, but you should always offer compensation as a means of building trust and economic justice.

Create More Financial Access

Economic justice is an important part of equity, and many organizations aim to increase access to their virtual events by making them free or low-cost. The goal is to engage supporters at various levels of giving, volunteers who donate time but may not be able to afford the cost of the event, and even program participants and the community at large.

While the intention is a good one, there are a few pitfalls you will want to avoid when making your events more economically just.

Be Thoughtful When Involving Program Participants

Many organizations like to ask their program participants to present in virtual donor events. Assuming that it is safe and appropriate to do so, these opportunities can be a fantastic way of cultivating empathy and deepening our supporters’ understanding. They can also run the risk of being exploitative. I have a few tips to ensure you are doing right by your program participants, setting them (and your donors) up for a successful experience:

Commit to Changing Beliefs and Behaviors

While incorporating equity into our process and events is good, it is not enough. Ultimately, we want to see changes in systems and societies. That is not a project any nonprofit can undertake alone, but we can do our share to deepen our audience’s consciousness around critical issues.

All virtual events should be educational. Perhaps the education component is the core content of the virtual event, or perhaps you work it in to a closing talk after a virtual happy hour, but the point is that every event is an opportunity to provide new insight and perspective. And we can only achieve this by actively engaging with educational content: conversations, connections, dialogues, debriefs, and discussions.

Virtual events should never just be passive webinars and lectures. Ask yourself:
What would solve the problem we are trying to solve—besides more money?
What do we really wish people understood about our work?

Answering these questions will help you to identify topics and themes to address in an event that further your mission and change the beliefs and behaviors needed to make our world more just and equitable.

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