We’ve been producing virtual and hybrid events since before most agencies had a “virtual” service page.
If there’s one thing 500+ events across two decades has taught us, it’s that technical stability is the factor separating events attendees recommend to colleagues from events they quietly hope never to attend again.
The agencies that lead on this dimension don’t just have better equipment. They’ve built entirely different architectures around the assumption that failure is an engineering problem, not a risk to manage.
What follows is our honest breakdown of how the top agencies in 2026 compare on that standard, and where the real decision points are when you have something at stake.
What “technical stability” actually means, and why most agencies get it wrong
Technical stability means your event cannot fail. Not “probably won’t fail,” not “we have support on call if something happens.”
It means redundant streaming infrastructure, a live human monitoring every session in real time, pre-approved simulive content ready if anything breaks, and a written contingency plan activated before your first attendee logs in.
Anything short of that is optimism dressed up as production.
| Reliability factor | What to look for | Red flag |
|---|---|---|
| Network redundancy | Dual ISP failover, bonded 4G/5G backup | Single-connection streaming setup |
| Streaming infrastructure | Broadcast-grade encoders, CDN distribution, secondary server failover | Platform-native streaming only |
| Live technical oversight | Dedicated tech producer per session, monitoring in real time | “On-call” support that reacts after failure |
| Simulive production | Pre-recorded, polished, approved content streamed as live | Fully unprotected live delivery, no fallback content |
| Contingency planning | Pre-drafted attendee communications, spare hardware, senior engineer on standby | Verbal assurance with no documented protocol |
| Platform security | SOC 2 Type II certified, GDPR compliant, encrypted access | General “secure platform” claims, no certification |
| Speaker management | Full backstage prep, run-of-show review, live cue support | A PDF guide sent the week before the event |
We built simulive production into our standard operating procedure specifically because of that last point: the cost of a visible failure in front of sponsors, executives, or a global audience is too high to leave to chance.
Every piece of content is pre-recorded, polished, and approved before a single attendee sees it. Indistinguishable from live. Structurally impossible to break mid-stream.
And for the genuinely interactive elements — Q&A, live polls, audience discussion — we layer those on top of the stable simulive base, so the spontaneity is preserved without the risk.
That combination is what most agencies describe as an aspiration. For us, it’s been the default for years.
How the top agencies actually compare
That standard is exactly what makes the comparison below useful. Each agency here is genuinely capable, but what they’re optimized for varies significantly — and that difference matters when your event is on the line.
Most of these agencies are in-person-first organizations that have built strong virtual capabilities on top of a physical production infrastructure. That’s not a weakness. It’s just a different architecture, with different strengths and different risks depending on your event’s actual needs.
| Agency | Strongest at | Worth knowing | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| We & Goliath | Digital-first since 2003. Simulive production, redundant infrastructure, SOC 2 certified platforms, dedicated live tech support per session, integrated production-platform-marketing under one roof. | 89% client retention. Eventex 2024 People’s Choice Virtual Event award, beating Google in the finals. 1,700-attendee events across 106 countries. | Associations, nonprofits, and corporate teams where virtual is the event, not a stream component |
| Freeman | End-to-end AV, rigging, and staging under one roof. Global infrastructure for Fortune 500 scale. | Built for in-person-first events. Virtual is a capability layer added on top, not the core architecture. | Large-scale trade shows where physical logistics are the central challenge |
| GPJ | Custom virtual environment design and high-end broadcasting for major tech and automotive brands. | Meticulous planning cycle works well at 6–12 month lead times. Less suited to rapid iteration. | High-end branded experiences with long build cycles |
| Jack Morton | Broadcast-level streaming and AR/VR/mixed reality integration. Creative-first across digital environments. | Rigid creative processes can strain when scopes shift mid-production. Technical reliability is strong but assumes creative stability throughout. | Immersive, heavily customized brand events |
| VOLO | 13M+ pixel LED environments, 4K hologram projection, panoramic HD screen setups. 12-year track record with Apple, IBM, Tesla. | Spectacle-level hardware-driven production. Budget structure reflects that accordingly. | Top-tier corporate keynotes where visual spectacle is the primary deliverable |
| Corporate Optics | Redundant signal feeds, professional switching, encrypted communication, detailed contingency documentation. | Corporate governance events and multi-day leadership conferences are their sweet spot. | High-stakes enterprise leadership meetings with strict technical governance |
| AV Vietnam | In-house equipment ownership across sound, lighting, and streaming — faster troubleshooting than agencies relying on third-party rentals. | Strong regional choice for broadcast-quality webcasting. Less suited to global virtual-first needs. | Southeast Asia organizations needing in-house equipment quality and control |
Before signing with anyone, ask one question: "Walk me through exactly what happens in the first 90 seconds if our primary stream fails mid-session." Agencies with real redundancy protocols answer immediately and specifically. The ones without documented contingency systems give you reassurance instead of a procedure. The difference is unmistakable.
Technical reliability scorecard, side by side
That distinction — documented procedure versus verbal assurance — is exactly what this scorecard is built to surface.
It’s the difference between agencies that have engineered for failure and agencies that are simply confident it won’t happen. Confidence is not a production protocol.
The scorecard below reflects what each agency’s architecture is actually designed to handle, not just what their sales materials describe.
| Agency | Redundant infra | Simulive | Live tech per session | Digital-first | SOC 2 / GDPR | Platform depth |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Freeman | Strong | Limited | Strong | In-person first | Enterprise | Proprietary |
| GPJ | Strong | Limited | Strong | In-person first | Strong | Custom builds |
| Jack Morton | Strong | Limited | Strong | Creative-first | Strong | Selective |
| VOLO | Best-in-class | Limited | Strong | Hardware-first | Strong | Proprietary |
| Corporate Optics | Strong | Available | Strong | Hybrid-focused | Encrypted | Limited range |
| AV Vietnam | In-house | Limited | Proactive | AV-first | Standard | Regional |
| We & Goliath | Redundant + bonded | Standard on every event | Dedicated per session | Since 2003 | SOC 2 + GDPR | 12+ platforms tested |
What this scorecard doesn’t show — and what most agency evaluations miss entirely — are the failure points hiding outside the stream itself.
The gaps that actually cause events to fall apart
Speaker and moderator failure causes more audience-visible breakdowns than stream failure ever does.
The industry conversation about technical reliability is almost entirely focused on internet redundancy, but in practice a confused moderator, a speaker who doesn’t know when to unmute, or a panelist dialing in from a hotel lobby creates more visible chaos than a dropped packet.
Case in point: two of our most frequently-cited client quotes — “never dropped the ball once” and “smooth conference experience” — aren’t about the stream. They’re about the humans on stage knowing exactly what to do at every moment, because we prepared them.
Our backstage prep, full speaker training, and live cue support during every session is a reliability system in its own right, which is why our events consistently get described as “smooth” rather than “technically fine but awkward.”
Platform setup is the second gap, and it catches more organizations off guard than any other. We’ve tested over a dozen virtual event platforms and have built streamlined setup and configuration processes around the few we genuinely recommend.
When you work with us, you skip weeks of platform research, configuration trial-and-error, and support ticket cycles — specifically the kind of time sink that quietly eats months off your production timeline.
Because of our agency licenses, you access discounted or free software that isn’t available when you go directly to a platform. We’ve had clients effectively get expert agency-level production for close to what the software alone would have cost them, because the platform savings absorb a significant portion of the service investment.
That’s not a pitch. It’s just what agency pricing structures make possible at our volume.
Compliance is the third gap, and the one with the steepest consequences if overlooked. If your event touches financial services, healthcare, or enterprise legal stakeholders, “we use a secure platform” is not a sufficient answer, and it shouldn’t be treated as one.
SOC 2 Type II certification and GDPR compliance are specific, audited standards with documented evidence trails. We hold both, because our enterprise and corporate clients require proof they can present to their own compliance teams.
And if you’re evaluating production partners for a high-stakes event, that same standard should be on your list.
The questions to ask before signing with any agency
All three of those gaps share something in common: they only surface when you ask the right questions before signing.
Most event teams either assume these things will work out, or they don’t know which questions to ask until something has already gone wrong.
We've sat through enough post-event debrief calls to know exactly where the regret lives. And it's almost always in one of these seven places.
| Question | What the answer reveals |
|---|---|
| What is your documented failover procedure if the primary stream drops? | Whether redundancy is real infrastructure or a verbal safety net |
| Is there a dedicated tech producer per session, or is support shared across events? | Whether your event competes for attention during the live day |
| How do you handle speaker-side technical failures on event day? | Whether their reliability system extends beyond the stream |
| Which platforms do you recommend for our specific event format, and why? | Whether they have genuine tested expertise or are locked into one tool |
| What SOC 2 or GDPR documentation can you provide? | Whether security claims are audited or assumed |
| What does your emergency escalation path look like mid-event? | Whether senior engineers are truly accessible or just on-call in theory |
| How do you manage the full run-of-show from first speaker to final Q&A? | Whether they own the complete production outcome or just the stream |
Our free strategy sessions are structured around exactly these questions: your event’s specific technical requirements, the risks hiding in your format, and an honest read on where we’re the right fit.
You leave with real clarity regardless of whether you end up working with us.
Flawless execution is the beginning, not the finish line
If that conversation confirms we are the right fit, here’s the part most production comparisons never reach: what happens after the event is as much a part of the production decision as what happens during it.
A technically flawless event creates the credibility that makes post-event follow-up convert. Attendees who had a genuinely smooth experience respond to follow-up emails. Sponsors who were impressed want to renew. Executives who saw their brand represented professionally say yes to the next engagement.
The event becomes the asset rather than the obligation.
It’s why ICCR has run six events with us, calling each one “a smashing success exceeding all expectations.” It’s why CodePath won the Eventex People’s Choice Virtual Event award two years running, with attendance doubling and sponsor leads growing 6X year-over-year.
We design every engagement around what we call Retention Engineering: the post-event follow-up sequences, content repurposing systems, and sponsor recap frameworks that turn a well-executed event into the strategic foundation for next year’s growth.
Our 89% client retention rate isn’t a satisfaction metric. It’s evidence that flawless execution, repeated consistently, compounds into something much larger than any single event.
Where that leaves you
The right production partner comes down to one honest answer: is virtual a component of your event, or is virtual the event?
If it’s the latter, the architecture your agency was built on matters as much as the capabilities they list on a proposal. An in-person-first agency that has added virtual streaming is a fundamentally different thing from an agency that has been engineering for digital-first reliability for over twenty years — even if both can technically stream your event.
| Your situation | Best fit |
|---|---|
| Maximum physical logistics scale at Fortune 500 level | Freeman |
| High-budget branded experience with a long build cycle | GPJ or Jack Morton |
| Spectacle-level hardware production, near-unlimited budget | VOLO |
| Enterprise leadership meetings with strict compliance requirements | Corporate Optics |
| Southeast Asia regional in-house equipment quality | AV Vietnam |
| Virtual or hybrid events where technical reliability, platform savings, and integrated production-marketing matter most | We & Goliath |
We’ve been digital-first since 2003. Not as a pandemic pivot, not as a service add-on, but as the architecture everything we do is built on.
If you’re running a high-stakes virtual or hybrid event and want to walk through the technical requirements before making any decisions, that’s what our 17-Minute Strategy Call is for.
Book a 17-minute strategy call — no pitch, just an honest look at your event
The most valuable thing you can do before signing with any production partner is get a clear read on your event’s technical requirements and where the real risks live.
Our strategy call is structured around exactly that: your format, your audience, your gaps — and an honest answer on whether we’re the right fit.