Forum Discussion
External presenter can't join live-event after it started?
- May 02, 2021
External Presenters are now much easier to handle, I made a video demo of it today
What Microsoft call Webinars is also coming soon, and isn't related to Live Events but regular meetings. As meetings will soon allow 1000 attendees with an overflow to 10,000 viewers we don't need to use a Live Event in order to achieve scale, it's more of an choice whether you need the production experience. Maybe required for an all company broadcast, but not for what most of us would call a webinar. Meetings already have plenty of capabilities for attendee and presenter roles (including promotion), audio mute, video mute, reactions, raise hands etc. etc.
The feature being called Webinars is really meeting registration, you can create a sign-up page where people can register for your meeting and then they receive an actual invite. There's then some kind a connection between the registered people and who attended. It's due by End May.
Paul McDevitt Hello, my intention with the previous reply was just a heads-up as it's rolling out now. When it comes to Teams Live Events I'm not the member who should reply to be honest. I know pretty much about Teams except Live Events. That's why I tried to ping Linus earlier but people are busy with their day-to-day jobs so sometimes you just have to go via the official channels to get in touch with the experts in the Microsoft support.
About the webinars and the other associated features they are all scheduled for April/May!
https://www.microsoft.com/en-ww/microsoft-365/roadmap?filters=Microsoft%20Teams%2CIn%20development%2CLaunched&searchterms=webinar
- Paul McDevittMay 03, 2021Copper ContributorThanks. I get that. It seems the Microsoft Live is a rarely understood feature. We have been using for 6+ months to run events. We run into different issues or have been reviewing the capabilities comparing to other platforms. I notice I generally get shot down by those who don't actually use it much (as a defence of Microsoft 365.) We sell Microsoft 365 (our experience mostly on the voice side) so we have a vested interest in it working well, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't point out where it is not fit for purpose. As in, don't represent it as a webinar event tool for public audiences if it is primarily a large enterprise internal tool, for example.
Anyway, this forum has been one of the few to take these questions seriously and offer real answers or help. So thanks for that.