Love in the Time of Coronavirus: How COVID-19 Will Change Weddings

We got a call last month from an event planner who was pretty confused. She had a corporate conference coming up and kept hearing two terms thrown around: "live streaming" and "hybrid event." She wanted to know if they were the same thing, and more importantly, what kind of AV equipment she actually needed. Honestly? Most people mix these up.

Here's the thing. Live streaming and hybrid events are not the same, and the AV setup for each is completely different. One is about broadcasting to remote viewers. The other is about running two events at once. And if you get the equipment wrong, you're either going to overspend or end up with a technical disaster on your hands.

So let's break down what each format actually means, what gear you need, and how to decide which one makes sense for your event.

What's the Difference Between Live Streaming and a Hybrid Event?

Live streaming is pretty straightforward. You have an in-person event, and you broadcast it to people who aren't there. Think of a wedding where out-of-town family watches on Zoom, or a company town hall that streams to remote offices. The focus is still on the people in the room. The stream is a nice-to-have for those who can't make it.

A hybrid event is different. You're running two parallel experiences. One for the in-person audience and one for the virtual audience, and both groups matter equally. Virtual attendees aren't just watching. They're participating. They can ask questions, network in breakout rooms, vote on polls, and interact with the content in real time. You're basically hosting two events that happen to share the same content.

We've done both types dozens of times, and the planning process is night and day. Live streaming is an add-on to an existing event. Hybrid is a whole separate production layer.

AV Equipment for Live Streaming (The Basics)

If you just need to stream your event, the equipment list is manageable. You don't need to go crazy.

Cameras: One or two quality cameras will do it. We usually recommend at least one PTZ (pan-tilt-zoom) camera that can capture wide shots of the stage and zoom in on speakers. For a basic corporate presentation, a single 4K PTZ camera works fine. If you have panel discussions or multiple speakers, add a second camera for variety.

Audio: This is where people mess up. Your audience in the room might hear everything fine, but remote viewers hear what the microphones pick up. You need dedicated mics for every speaker. Lavalier mics work well for presentations. For panels, we use gooseneck podium mics or boundary mics on the table. And you absolutely need an audio mixer to balance all those inputs before they hit the stream.

Encoder: You need something to take your camera and audio feeds and turn them into a stream that goes to YouTube, Zoom, or wherever. A hardware encoder like a Teradek or Magewell box is more reliable than software encoding on a laptop, especially for events longer than an hour.

Internet: Do not rely on the venue's Wi-Fi. Ever. We always bring a dedicated hardwired connection or a backup cellular hotspot. You need at least 10 Mbps upload speed for a quality 1080p stream, and honestly, we prefer 25+ Mbps to have some headroom.

Lighting: If the in-person event lighting looks good, the stream will probably look okay. But if your venue has those awful fluorescent overheads or dim mood lighting, you'll need to add some LED panels to light the speakers properly. Cameras need more light than your eyes do.

That's it for a basic live stream. Total cost for this setup runs about $8,000 to $15,000 if you're renting, or closer to $25,000 to $40,000 if you're buying your own gear.

AV Equipment for Hybrid Events (The Full Build)

Hybrid events need everything a live stream needs, plus a whole second layer of technology to make the virtual audience feel like they're actually part of the event.

Multiple Cameras: You'll want at least three. One wide shot of the stage, one tight shot for speakers, and one for the audience (because virtual attendees like to see reactions). Some hybrid events we've worked on use five or six cameras to capture different angles, especially if there's a live Q&A or networking component.

Advanced Audio Mixing: You're not just sending audio to the stream. You're also managing audio feedback between the in-room speakers and the virtual platform. This means you need a digital mixer with proper routing, compression, and possibly acoustic echo cancellation. We use Allen & Heath or Yamaha digital consoles for most hybrid setups.

Confidence Monitors: Speakers need to see the virtual audience. We set up monitors near the stage that show the Zoom grid or chat feed so presenters can interact with remote attendees in real time. This is critical. If speakers can't see virtual participants, they'll ignore them.

Graphics and Lower Thirds: Hybrid events usually need live graphics. Lower thirds with speaker names, poll results displayed on screen, sponsor logos cycling in the background. This requires a video switcher (like an ATEM Mini or Roland V-60HD) and someone running graphics software like vMix or OBS.

Dual Outputs: You're feeding content to two places. The in-room screens need one video feed (usually just the presentation slides and camera shots). The virtual platform needs a different feed (often with graphics, speaker names, and a different layout). That means you need a video switcher that can handle multiple program outputs.

Virtual Platform Integration: This is the biggest difference. You're not just streaming to YouTube. You're running Zoom, Hopin, or a similar platform that lets virtual attendees interact. That means you need someone monitoring chat, launching polls, managing breakout rooms, and troubleshooting tech issues for remote participants. Budget for at least one dedicated virtual event manager.

Backup Systems: When you have 500 people in a room and another 2,000 online, you can't afford a failure. We run redundant encoders, backup internet connections, and spare cameras on standby. One of our corporate clients had a main encoder fail 15 minutes into their keynote. We switched to the backup in under 30 seconds. Nobody even noticed.

The equipment cost for a hybrid event is significantly higher. You're looking at $25,000 to $50,000 for a rental setup, or $75,000 to $150,000 to own the gear. Plus you need a bigger crew. A live stream might need two or three technicians. A hybrid event usually needs five to eight people running everything.

Real Examples from Events We've Worked On

Last year we did a medical conference in Orlando with about 300 in-person attendees and 1,200 virtual. They initially wanted a simple live stream. We walked them through what that would look like: virtual attendees watching passively, no interaction, no networking. They switched to a full hybrid format. We set up breakout sessions where in-person and virtual attendees could join the same small group discussions. Virtual folks could ask questions during Q&A just like the people in the room. The event ended up being way more engaging, but it required triple the AV budget.

On the flip side, we worked with a nonprofit gala that just wanted to stream the program to donors who couldn't attend. They had about 200 people in the ballroom and maybe 50 watching online. For that, a simple live stream made perfect sense. One PTZ camera, a wireless lav mic on the host, and a direct feed to YouTube. Done. Total rental cost was around $3,500.

The difference? The medical conference needed both audiences to interact. The gala just needed remote donors to feel included. Know which one you're doing before you start pricing equipment.

How to Decide Which Format You Actually Need

Ask yourself a few questions:

Do virtual attendees need to interact? If the answer is no (they're just watching), you probably need a live stream, not a hybrid event. If they need to ask questions, join discussions, or network with other attendees, you need hybrid.

What's your audience split? If 90% of your attendees are in person and only a handful are remote, a simple stream is fine. If you have significant numbers in both groups, hybrid makes more sense.

What's your budget? Be honest here. Hybrid events cost at least double what a live stream costs, sometimes triple. If budget is tight, a really good live stream is better than a poorly executed hybrid event.

How important is production quality? A corporate earnings call might be fine with a Zoom webinar and one camera. A product launch with thousands of viewers needs multiple cameras, professional lighting, and polished graphics. Match your production level to the importance of the event.

Does your venue have the infrastructure? Some venues have built-in AV systems that work great for live streaming but can't handle the complexity of a hybrid event. We've been to convention centers with fiber internet and broadcast-quality control rooms, and we've been to hotel ballrooms with one ethernet port and flickering overheads. Your venue matters.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

The biggest mistake we see is people calling something a hybrid event when they really just want a live stream. They end up paying for features they don't use. Or worse, they try to run a hybrid event with live stream equipment and wonder why it's a mess.

Another common issue: neglecting the virtual experience. If you're going hybrid, you can't just point a camera at the stage and call it good. Virtual attendees need good audio, readable slides, and a way to interact. We've seen events where the in-room experience was incredible but the virtual audience got a shaky camera feed and muffled audio. That's not hybrid. That's just a bad live stream with a fancy name.

And here's one that trips up first-timers: bandwidth. If you're running a hybrid event with 500 virtual participants, you need serious internet. We've had clients insist the venue Wi-Fi would be fine, only to have the stream crash when everyone showed up and started using their phones. Always test your connection at the actual event time when the venue is busy.

Budget Considerations (The Real Numbers)

A basic live stream for a small event (under 100 people) usually costs $3,000 to $8,000 in rental fees. That gets you one or two cameras, audio equipment, an encoder, and a technician for the day.

A mid-range live stream for a corporate event (200 to 500 people) runs $10,000 to $20,000. You're adding more cameras, better audio mixing, professional lighting, and probably graphics.

A full hybrid event for the same size crowd starts at $25,000 and can easily hit $60,000 or more. You're paying for the extra equipment, the virtual platform subscription, and a bigger crew to manage both audiences.

Those are rental numbers. If you're doing multiple events per year, buying your own equipment might make sense. But the upfront cost is steep, and you'll need trained staff to run everything.

So Which One Do You Need?

If you just want people who can't attend to watch your event, go with live streaming. It's simpler, cheaper, and gets the job done.

If you need both audiences to participate equally, you need a true hybrid event. Plan for the extra cost and complexity, but know that when it's done right, hybrid events create a much more engaging experience.

And if you're still not sure? Call someone who's done both. We've set up live streams for tiny nonprofit fundraisers and hybrid conferences for Fortune 500 companies. The right format depends on your goals, your budget, and your audience. There's no one-size-fits-all answer.

But here's what we know for sure: get the AV setup right, and your event works. Get it wrong, and nobody remembers the content. They just remember the tech problems.

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic shut down the industry that turns the fairytale wedding dreams into booked realities. Many couples, due to stay-at-home orders and executive orders limiting gatherings, had been forced to postpone or cancel their wedding celebrations. Read on below as our very own Jeff Greene discusses how COVID-19 will change the future of weddings.

Future of Weddings
Smaller weddings are here to stay for a while. It will increase eventually, but right now we will be seeing weddings that are 15-30% of their original size. What this does is present new options on wedding plans, Big banquet, fancy ballrooms, luxury hotels – these all have a high rental rate of at least $20k-$30k for just the venue fee for a full wedding day. Now, couples can take advantage of smaller weddings and they can afford certain luxury accommodations because their guest count is lower. Everything is secondary to beautiful photos. We will see couples book a small reception at those luxury hotels or hotel restaurants granting them access so they can easily take their photos on-site at those beautiful properties. This will all be cheaper than renting a venue for 150-200 for a full wedding day. We are also seeing an increase in afternoon functions. As more venues open in the marketplace, there are so many more choices for couples to choose from. In Florida specifically, we are seeing new high rises and condos are growing in South Florida – all with event spaces – in addition to new venues popping up in the Redlands that are popular for farm to table themed celebrations. Smaller weddings will be active for a while because brides can book an experience for 25-30 people at a luxury venue with magnificent view (and the photos that can be taken there) that they wouldn’t have been able to afford before.

Venue Costs

The cost of everything has gone up. So naturally, so have venue costs. You have to now consider venues are offering sanitizing stations/materials and additional staffing – which both increase costs. Costs are increasing 20-30%. While this is a good time to travel, as travel prices remain low, prices for venues and catering will rise naturally due to the rising costs of food and fuel.  Fuel alone has a higher impact on everything, which will cause additional wedding services prices to rise. The cost of delivery, the cost of catering and the cost of staffing will rise. While other industries can afford to keep the same price, with food and personal services you still have to pay for personnel as well. Think about the fact there are no buffets at the moment – avoiding guests touching food and serviceware. This means caterers need additional staff to serve guests.

Virtual Components

We will continue to see live streaming aspects becoming a part of every event. Even if you want a smaller wedding beyond COVID-19, you can include more guests at your celebration with a livestream. Another popular option is hybrid streaming – where wedding guests can interact with other guests who are not there physically. Think of this as an enhanced live Zoom or FaceTime experience. We’ve actually done quite a bit of these streamings for mitzvahs, weddings and virtual graduation ceremonies. Although we utilize familiar technology like Zoom, YouTube Live and Facebook Live that we all have access to, it’s important for couples to work with the right people who have experience providing the additional equipment technology and backups that will enhance the experience beyond what these familiar technologies typically offer. We will see virtual aspects rise beyond COVID-19 as this helps elderly, military or pregnant guests still attend if they otherwise couldn’t. 

The Future of Events

No matter where we are with regulations, a sizable percentage of people will still be wearing masks for some time.  People will still be careful at least for the next year, maybe even two. Events will be smaller because there are underlying things we just don’t know enough about. Different variants, additional waves, etc… There are still a lot of unknowns that will affect our industry. We won’t be seeing corporate events for a year, at least anything large. It takes at least one year to plan and organize a large corporate event or convention, so it will take 1-2 years for those to come back. There are a lot of people that have left the industry during this time simply because they couldn’t sustain their businesses. What that means is the cost of talent and services will also go up. Vendors can enter bidding wars and charge more simply because there are less choices available.  Already national groups are predicting that the costs of services are going to rise 30% or more – especially after years of event service rates remaining flat. 

Buyer Beware

During this free time, a lot of people have decided to become a DJ, wedding planner, photographer, etc… My advice is that clients strongly need to consider business experience when booking vendors. What COVID-19 has taught us is that real companies have the ability to stay the course and remain in business during these tough times.  I suggest working with seasoned businesses rather than independents who have recently jumped into the marketplace. We’ve seen many cases where an independent will leave brides hanging on their wedding day, causing unneeded change and stress. So work with a business that is responsible for its staff and will stand behind the company’s promise to deliver.

We are wishing our clients a summer of love! 84 West Events is here to make your wedding day dreams come true regardless of how soon your plans are for. Call 84 West Events today at 954-236-9000 or drop us an email at Celebrate@84WestEvents.com to get started today!