I’ve done a bunch of these over the years.
You don’t need additional “technical” help – but you do need some basics – and, ideally, least one additional set of hands if you want to make it work well.
On the technical side, go hand held and stay as mobile as possible. If you don’t shoot a ton, practice a good camera brace position (hands on controls, elbows braced at your body and camera held close so it’s not waving around too much – pan with your torso, not your arms or hands. You’ll NEED a simple on-camera light that dims. Use it sparingly, but you’ll have plenty of situations where a decent shot is backlit or just dull, and a little front fill will save the day.
Yes, get some shots of the enviromennt, wides of the rooms and decor – but THAT IS NOT THE KEY HERE.
The NUMBER ONE thing in these post-convention hightlight reels that people want to see is THEMSELVES.
The more faces you can get on screen the better. If you absolutely can’t do any sync sound, you’ve GOT to be the kind of shooter that can roll – then get a group of people to turn and wave, smile and look lively.
That’s where the second body comes in. If it’s at ALL possible, find somebody in marketing or PR who has a bright smile and maybe somebody everyone knows and likes. Have THEM take out a simple wireless stick mic and “interview” people. It can be as simple as “Are you having FUN!” – the point is to get people ANNIMATED.
Prowl the event looking for small groups and singles. Make SURE you get representative groups. Sales teams are often much more demonstrative than IT, for example. But it’s important not to make it ALL about one group.
A convention is the one place where you often lots of the vertical teams participating – so one happy face from Real Estate or Loss Prevention who typically go unsung compared to sales – goes a LONG way to making all the elements of the corporate culture feel inclusive.
Also, if you understand upper management’s personalities and have any solid relationships there – and you can get them to do something lighthearted and engaging, that’s GOLD. It helps bring them down from the ivory tower and positions them as part of the team rather than above it all.
You (and hopefully whatever sparkling personality from PR you can recruit as a partner) will have to bust your tails as a solo team. But it can be done.
Good luck.
ADDENDUM: Last minute free concept. See if you can get permission from the meeting coordinator or the execs to do something like a Champagne VIDEO Challenge. Tell the participants to use their cel phones to interview EACH OTHER and that you’ll pick the best 3 to include in the video. Maybe 2 just questions. What do you like best about your job? And “who in your department is an unsung hero? Set up a Dropbox or Private YouTube account or something similar for them to upload their video to. It its all crap, no loss. Just announce the winner and give them the Bottle of Champagne at the last nights dinner. If you get a few submissions that are worthy of use – BONUS!
EVERYONE is carrying video cameras in their phones now. Find a way to leverage that.
Creator of XinTwo – https://www.xintwo.com
The shortest path to FCP X mastery.