Broadcast-quality investor media, built for the market.
We produced a series of on-camera interviews with Greatland Resources leadership, setting up a purpose-built studio with multi-camera coverage, professional lighting, and broadcast-grade audio. The resulting media library gives Greatland polished, consistent video content for investor updates, market communications, and corporate channels.
Logistics
We run a bespoke registration system for each event, managing RSVPs, attendee categorisation, and access control from a single platform. Investors, analysts, and press receive tailored confirmations, and the organising team has live visibility of who has confirmed, declined, or yet to respond, right up to the day.
Branded badges are produced on-site, printed on demand as guests arrive. Walk-ups and last-minute additions are handled smoothly, and the finished badges match the event's identity rather than looking like generic conference passes.
We identify venues that fit the audience, the message, and the logistics — central enough to draw a London buyside crowd, with the right room dynamics for an interview set or a fireside format. Negotiation, contracting, and supplier coordination sit with us throughout.
Every event is technically planned in advance: room schematics, camera positions, microphone configurations, and screen feeds are mapped before the room is loaded in. On the day, our crew runs the full AV stack so the production looks intentional rather than improvised.

Promotion

A town hall is only as valuable as the audience that turns up. We promote the event across owned and earned channels in the run-up, and keep the recording discoverable long after the broadcast ends.
We have direct connections to the Slack workspaces, Telegram channels, and investor forums where retail shareholders actually congregate. Event details get shared through those communities alongside the broader campaign — reaching investors who are already engaged with the sector and primed to turn up.
The broadcast lives on the company's branded YouTube channel after the event, giving investors and prospects a permanent, searchable record. We handle channel setup, thumbnails, descriptions, and metadata so the recordings surface in search and play cleanly across embeds elsewhere.
Promotion through Ticker, the investor platform behind the company's IR site, places the event in front of an audience that has already opted in. Existing investors and watchlist subscribers see the event surfaced where they already check share price, news, and disclosures.
Hosting and interviewing
We provide the interviewer for both the live broadcast and the in-person town hall. The hosting role isn't ceremonial — our team prepares the questions, manages the room, and asks the things the audience came to hear.
On the broadcast, our team takes the host's chair on camera — guiding the conversation, keeping it moving, and making sure the speakers cover the ground that matters to the watching audience.
Investors submit questions in advance through the registration platform. Our team reads through the full list, deduplicates, and prioritises so the strongest, most representative questions make it on camera. The final set can optionally be shared with the client beforehand — useful when sensitive topics are likely to come up.
Alongside the audience questions, we bring our own line of inquiry. Industry knowledge, recent market context, and the questions sharp analysts would ask all feed in — keeping the interview useful rather than purely promotional.
At the in-person town hall, the same team takes the room: introducing speakers, managing audience Q&A, and occasionally introducing a question of our own when the conversation needs a nudge.

Live stream
Watch the latest Greatland Resources live stream
We deliver the complete town hall broadcast — from the cameras and microphones in the room to the platform investors watch on. Production, encoding, delivery, and audience interaction all sit with one team.
Production-grade cameras cover the room from multiple angles, with live switching to a polished broadcast feed. Speakers, presentations, and audience reactions are all captured cleanly, and a recording is delivered alongside the live stream for on-demand replay.
The town hall is broadcast in real time to investors anywhere in the world, with low-latency playback so the conversation feels live. Audio and video are encoded on-site by our team to maintain quality from room to viewer.
We provide the platform that hosts the broadcast — a branded delivery layer that frames the event in the company's identity rather than handing investors off to a generic third-party player. Access can be open or gated to a registered audience.
A live chat room runs alongside the stream, giving investors a direct channel to submit questions during the event. Moderation and prioritisation sit with our team so leadership respond to the questions that matter, in the moment, on camera.
In person town hall
The in-person town hall is its own production. We manage the room from the venue relationship through to the moment the floor opens for questions — handling the practicalities so the speakers and the audience can focus on the conversation.
We identify the venue, manage the booking, and own the relationship through to event day. Walkthroughs, room layout decisions, and pre-event coordination all run through us, so the company's team isn't fielding venue queries in the run-up.
Most venues come with their own AV crew. We brief them, share run sheets, and coordinate tech checks — making sure the venue's team and our broadcast crew are aligned on signal flow, microphones, and cue points before the audience walks in.
Once the floor opens for questions, our team works the room with handheld radio mics — getting to whoever wants to speak quickly, keeping the audio clean for both the room and the live stream feed.
Our host runs the conversation on stage: introductions, transitions between speakers, the audience Q&A, and the timing decisions that keep a 60-minute town hall on schedule.


Drinks reception

After the formal session ends, attendees move to a drinks reception elsewhere in the venue. Same building, no separate trip — the conversation that started on stage carries on between investors, leadership, and the wider team.
Wine, beer, and soft drinks served from the bar in the reception space. The selection is sized and timed to the audience — generous without becoming the focus of the evening.
A short, well-paced canapé service runs in parallel — light enough that conversation doesn't stop, substantial enough to act as a meal for investors arriving straight from work.
The reception runs in the same building as the town hall, so leadership and attendees move together rather than dispersing. Investors who have travelled in for the event get the time with the team that makes attending in person worth the trip.


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