Cranfield University is a postgraduate-only institution in Bedford, England, known across the globe for its innovative research, state-of-the-art facilities, and leading science, technology, and management programs.
Cranfield’s online learning studio, which opened at the start of 2018, is an audio-visual space that allows the university’s staff to create engaging educational, marketing, and conference events for a range of audiences. According to studio director Toby Thompson, Ph.D., it was built as a facility for faculty experts to deliver quality content with a high production level.
After Cranfield moved to emergency remote instruction with Zoom during the pandemic, the next step involved pushing the boundaries of Zoom to new levels of creativity and innovation. Naturally, this intersected with Thompson’s work in the studio, creating opportunities for highly interactive custom virtual experiences.
New opportunities for universities
Thompson believes that Cranfield University is currently transitioning between two modes of Zoom usage. “The first is teaching and learning — replicating the classroom experience and building competence in Zoom’s existing features,” he explained. “The second is leveraging how our audiences appreciate and even prefer the use of video, and then adopting a TV-news style format to use the platform for marketing and showcasing events, as well as visually impactful teaching.” The feedback from students and faculty is enthusiastic, said Thompson.
The studio currently hosts virtual events of all types with a crew of three video technicians and an executive producer handling the design and logistics of each live online event. The format of the session can differ depending on the type of event — a host can be in-studio, sitting on a couch and speaking via Zoom with experts in a laboratory on a virtual screen, or several guests can have a discussion in person while cutting between different remote speakers or audience members on a screen.

“Combining a professional streaming-studio output with the Zoom platform we’re all familiar with ushers in a new set of opportunities for universities, where online is here to stay,” Thompson said.
Any faculty member at Cranfield can use the space to host guest speakers and conduct special lectures. “Our lecturers say we’ve made their event look different — it stands out. They feel proud and happy to be in front of their students in this way,” Thompson said.

“What we do is not just teaching and learning; it’s bringing our university’s industrial-scale facilities live to our audience. The audience can be students, but it can also be corporate clients, researchers in other institutions, or prospective students,” he added.
Here is a snapshot of some events Thompson and his team have helped put together:
Live conferences, including multi-day events

Recently, Cranfield partnered with three business schools across Europe on a Women in Leadership conference that drew more than 600 virtual attendees, using Zoom to bring together speakers from around the world. “The audience was anyone interested in the topic of women in leadership — students, professors, the general public, it was open to anybody,” Thompson said.