Your content in JUNO falls into one of the following content types:
There’s also a bonus content type that allows for extra flexibility: Blurb
Session
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A session is a single talk, keynote speech, panel discussion, plenary, workshop, breakout room, networking meeting, or anything else you can think of! Whenever you want people to interact virtually by turning on their camera and microphone, sharing their screen, or chatting in a live audience, that’s a session.
All sessions have a specific start and end time and are displayed in the schedule on your site. If you want attendees to be able to watch a recording of the session afterward, it can be archived as a Library video.
Though there are many ways to use sessions, JUNO divides them into three basic types: Main stage, Panel, and Breakout. There are also options for live and pre-recorded sessions. See Session types to learn more about these details.
Common session features
Beyond video, audio, and screensharing, these additional features encourage attendee engagement. Browse your Session options to find out how you can customize sessions.
Greenroom: Speakers and moderators have time to prepare before the session begins.
Raise hand: Attendees who don’t have speaker privileges can click the hand icon to ask to come “on stage” and speak. If moderators accept their request, they can turn on their camera and microphone.
Chat: The audience and speakers can interact in the chat window to the right of the video stream.
Mod chat: Speakers and moderators can chat privately in the Mod tab of the chat window. Audience members can’t see it!
Q&A: Attendees can ask questions in the Q&A tab. They can also vote on other questions by clicking the thumbs-up icon. Questions with the most favorites will jump to the top of the list. Moderators can “ask the presenter“ a popular question by pushing it to the corner of the video stream, where everyone can easily see it. They can also add a text answer that displays below the original question in the Q&A tab.
Polls: Attendees can answer pre-populated poll questions. Moderators post the poll any time during the session and set a time limit for answers. Percentage results display when the poll ends. (See Question options to find out which elements of polls you can change.)
Emojis: Attendees can click reaction emojis to easily interact with presenters.
Send to breakouts: Speakers and moderators can push attendees into breakout rooms, setting the max number of attendees per room and the length of time for the breakouts. Breakouts can be randomly assigned or assigned based on similar user tags. Speakers and moderators are able to quickly visit each breakout room, and can send attendees back to the main session room at any time.
Rating: After the session, attendees can review it on a 5-star scale.
Library
Also known as On-demand.
Library content can be viewed by attendees on-demand (at any time they’d like). This means that it’s not included in the site schedule. It can be made available before, during, or after the event.
Examples of library content include on-demand sessions, videos, news articles, job postings, posters, information about sponsors, or custom pages. In general, if something isn’t a session, exhibitor, speaker, or course, it’s library content.
Library content can display videos, images, and text. To make it interactive, you can also include a Favorite button, a Complete button, and a comments section.
Exhibitor
Also known as Partner.
An exhibitor page refers to sponsors and exhibitors that have virtual booths on the platform. At JUNO, we call these exhibitor engagement suites. These suites can be set up by the exhibitors themselves to take extra work off your plate!
Exhibitor suites can feature videos, images, description text, contact information, exhibitor representatives, poll questions, products, downloads, comments and sponsored sessions. An in-depth tutorial is given to exhibitors to detail the specs of each image and how to set up their suite.
Speaker
Speakers at your conference can be highlighted on single speaker pages, linked to from sessions or a featured speaker section on one of your navigation pages. Speaker photos, bios and sessions are displayed on speaker pages. Attendees can also favorite speakers and complete the speaker pages to earn points. Additionally, any downloadable resources a speaker may want to provide can be highlighted on the speaker page.
Course
Courses allow your attendees to participate in quizzes, formalized surveys, or continuing education (CE) credit tests using the question types JUNO offers. They are broken into (2) elements: Tracks and Lessons.
A Track is a set of lessons all relating to one topic. A lesson is a specific set of questions within the track. Questions make up lessons and lessons make up tracks. Lessons can contain images, videos and text before, between and after questions. Here is an example of how a full course is laid out:
A certain topic has a series of 50 questions to be administered to the attendee.
A track is created with an introduction to the course
Lesson 1 is created with the first 10 questions.
Step (3) is repeated for the next (4) lessons until all questions are accounted for
The track is populated with the (5) different lessons in order and is published as a course
As a best practice, try to limit each lesson to no more than 15 questions in order to keep an attendee engaged in the content.
Tracks and lessons can be open all the time or locked until the previous track is completed. An option to prevent answer changes once a course is completed is another option available to each lesson.
Blurb
A blurb is a statement or graphic that can live on any navigation page. Uses of blurbs include information text or a static, unclickable image.
NOTE TO SELF:
Blurb needs special prefix/explanation - like it’s a flexible space for unique content you have in mind. Shows that there’s some flexibility to the content structure. Get multiple examples from an SME of what a blurb can do. Otherwise, it just feels like a technical explanation- not relevant to content types/use cases.