Organizations like the International Legal Technology Association (ILTA), Relativity and Clio will still host their signature events this year—but with a digital twist. ILTACON 2020, for example, will forego its original plans at the Gaylord Opryland Hotel in Nashville, Tennessee, and instead pivot toward a virtual event called "ILTA>ON" spanning Aug. 24 through 28. Meanwhile, Relativity Fest will also be moving online with a virtual conference to be held from Sept. 21 to 23, with the Clio Cloud Conference doing the same from Oct. 13 to 16. To be sure, none of these are the first organizations to digitize their programming in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic that has overshadowed much of 2020. The Corporate Legal Operations Consortium (CLOC), for instance, already transitioned its regularly scheduled May Las Vegas Institute into a series of webinars. But as more and more organizations continue to pivot in the direction of virtual events, they may have to work harder to keep an audience's attention and facilitate the kind of one-on-one connections that have typically drawn guests' interest. Here are five challenges that organizations in making the leap from in-person to digital conferences.