How to Start a Conversation at a Virtual Career Fair

You open the chat window.

The recruiter from your dream company is right there.

And you type: “Hi, I’m interested in your company.”

They respond politely. You respond back. And then it just… fizzles. The conversation ends before it really started, and you close the tab, wondering what went wrong.

That moment is why most people leave virtual career fairs with nothing. Not because the opportunities weren’t there. But because no one taught them how to actually show up.

This guide does that. You’ll learn how to research before the fair, start conversations that don’t feel awkward, ask questions that make recruiters remember you, and follow up in a way that keeps your name in their head long after the event ends.

Key Takeaways

  • Look up the recruiters attending on LinkedIn, read recent company news, and review open roles on the platform before you log in.
  • Write out your elevator pitch the night before: who you are, what makes you stand out, and the specific role or function you're targeting.
  • Prepare at least 3 to 5 questions per employer, organized by role, culture, and growth, so you're never fumbling.
  • Go into every 1:1 with one clear goal in mind: a referral, a follow-up contact, or clarity on next steps. Ask for it before the session ends.
  • Send a follow-up email within 24 to 48 hours that references something specific from your conversation, not just a generic "nice to meet you."

Before the Fair: Prepare Like You Mean It 

Research Before the Virtual Career Fair

researching before the fair

Most candidates skim the company’s About page and call it research. That’s not enough.

Start with the company’s website: their mission, values, products, and services, and then go further. Check their social media to see what they’re talking about right now. Look up any resources or job postings they’ve added to their exhibit booth on the platform before the fair opens. That alone tells you a lot about what they’re actively hiring for and what they value in a candidate.

Then look up the recruiters who will be at the booth on LinkedIn. Note where they’ve worked, what they post about, and what their role at the company actually is. You don’t need to mention any of this directly, but it gives you context that makes your conversations feel more informed and less generic.

Finally, check recent company news. A new product launch, a funding round, an expansion into a new market, all these are natural conversation anchors that show you’re paying attention.

The more specific your knowledge walking in, the more confident you’ll feel once you’re there.

Do the Prep Work the Night Before 

Start your preparation with your resume. Make sure it’s up to date, saved as a PDF, and ready to share at a moment’s notice. 

Most virtual fair platforms also let you build out a candidate profile that recruiters can search directly. Your work experience, education, and skills all need to be there.

searching candidate profiles at career fairs

Then sort your tech. Test your mic, camera, and internet connection. Check that your background is clean and your lighting is decent. A frozen screen or muffled audio in a 1:1 with a recruiter is not a great first impression.

Small things, but getting them out of the way the night before means you log in focused on the conversations, not the setup.

Craft Your Elevator Pitch 

Before the fair starts, write out your elevator pitch. This is the short introduction you’ll use to open almost every conversation, and if you haven’t prepared one, you’ll feel it in the moment.

The formula is simple: who you are, what makes you stand out, and what you’re looking for.

A 30-second structure looks like this:

Start with your name and background. Then add one specific thing about yourself that’s relevant. Then state what you’re looking for.

Here’s an example:

“Hi, I’m Sara. I’m a marketing graduate with two years of experience running social media for a mid-sized e-commerce brand. I’m looking for a role where I can focus more on content strategy and brand building.”

Practice it out loud before the fair. It should feel natural, not rehearsed.

During the Fair: Making the Most of Every Session 

Stay Active in Webinars 

participating in webinars at career fairs

There are two principles to win in a webinar at a career fair: first, actively listen, and second, ask questions. 

Pay attention to everything the speaker says, and prepare a list of questions that pop into your head during the session or beforehand as well. When it’s time to ask a question, wait for the designated Q&A portion rather than jumping in early. Use the raise hand feature if the platform has one. Keep your question specific; broad questions like “what’s it like to work there?” don’t land well in a group setting and don’t make you memorable. And don’t ask something the speaker already covered, because this signals you weren’t listening.

If the session requires video, keep your camera on, maintain eye contact, and make sure your background is quiet and distraction-free. Being visibly present and engaged makes an impression even before you say a word.

Network With a Plan

initiating conversations

The virtual career fair usually includes a networking lounge. Go spend time there, reaching out to potential employers across different media, both within the platform and through other channels, such as social media.

Initiate conversations. Take charge.

meeting schedulers

Book 1:1 chats with booth representatives via the meeting scheduler, and reserve a slot for yourself early on in the virtual career fair. When you get into a 1:1, treat it like a mini interview. 

Have a clear goal going in: are you looking for a referral, trying to understand the hiring process, or want to know if a specific role is still open? Know what you want out of that conversation before it starts. 

And before your 1:1 time runs out, always ask about next steps. What’s the hiring timeline? Is there someone else you should speak to? Can you follow up by email? Don’t let the session end without a clear direction forward.

You can also join group chats hosted by the employer and see how conversations are developing. Get noticed by participating in ice-breaking sessions organised by the host. Contribute to the ongoing discussions with your research and definitive arguments. Again, prepare what you have to say to lock in a great first impression. 

chatting with exhibitors and participants on the platform

Start Conversations That Stick

Opening a chat window and typing “Hi, I’m interested in your company” is not a conversation starter. It’s a dead end.

Here are some openers that actually work:

conversation openers

To Open a Chat:

  • “Hi! I’m [Name], studying [field]. I came across your booth and wanted to learn more about what roles you’re hiring for right now.”
  • “Hi [Name], I saw you’re hiring for [role], and I’d love to hear more about what the team looks like.”

To Ask About the Company:

  • “What kinds of projects is your team focused on right now?”
  • “What do you look for in candidates coming in at the entry level?”
  • “What’s something about working here that surprised you when you first joined?”

To Close the Conversation Gracefully:

  • “Thanks so much for your time. Do you have a business card or a LinkedIn I can connect on?”
  • “I really appreciate the insight. I’ll make sure to apply before [deadline] and reach out after.”

The goal at the end of every conversation is to leave with a name, a contact, and a clear next step.

Ask Questions that Get Real Answers

Asking good questions is one of the easiest ways to stand out. Most candidates ask nothing, or ask something so broad it barely registers.

Here are questions organized by what you want to find out:

General Employer Questions:

  • How would you describe the culture here?
  • How does leadership support professional development?
  • Are there mentorship programs or learning opportunities for new hires?

Questions About a Specific Role:

  • What does success look like in this role in the first six months?
  • What does the day-to-day actually look like for someone in this position?
  • What are the growth opportunities from here?

Questions About Culture and Growth

  • How does the company support employees who want to move into different functions?
  • What do people tend to love most about working here?
  • How has the company changed in the last two or three years?

Questions For 1:1 Sessions

  • How did you get started at this company?
  • What’s kept you here?
  • If you could give one piece of advice to someone applying for this role, what would it be?

Prepare at least three questions per employer. Have more ready in case some get answered before you get to ask them.

After the Fair: Following Up 

Most people close the laptop and wait. That’s the wrong move.

The follow-up is where a lot of offers actually get decided. Recruiters meet dozens of candidates in a single day. A well-timed, specific message after the fair is often what separates the people who get a callback from the ones who get forgotten.

Here’s what to do:

Send a Follow-up Email Within 24 to 48 Hours

Don’t wait longer than that. The conversation is still fresh, and so is your name.

Keep the email short. Reference something specific from your conversation, for example, a role they mentioned, a piece of advice they gave, or something about the team they described. Generic emails that could have been sent to anyone get treated like anyone sent them.

A simple structure that works:

  • Open by referencing where you met and something specific from the conversation
  • Restate your interest in the role or the company in one sentence
  • Attach your resume if they invited you to or if it feels appropriate
  • Close with a clear ask, whether that’s a follow-up call, confirmation they received your application, or just keeping in touch

Connect on LinkedIn the Same Day

Send a connection request with a short personalized note. Reference the fair and something from your conversation. Don’t send the default “I’d like to connect” message, since it reads as lazy, and you’ve already done the hard work of having the conversation.

Something like: “Hi [Name], great speaking with you at the fair today. I really appreciated your insight on [specific thing]. Would love to stay connected.”

That’s it; two touchpoints within 24 to 48 hours, both specific, both easy for the recruiter to respond to.

Virtual Career Fair Mistakes to Avoid 

virtual career fair mistakes to avoid

Just as important as knowing what to say is knowing what to avoid.

  • Logging In Late: The best 1:1 slots fill up fast, and early arrivals get first pick. Log in at least 15 minutes before the fair starts and book your sessions right away.
  • Visiting Every Booth Without a Shortlist: When you try to talk to everyone, no conversation goes deep enough to leave a real impression. Pick your top five or six employers and focus your time there.
  • Using the Same Elevator Pitch for Every Company: Recruiters can tell when an introduction is generic. Tweak your pitch for each employer so it connects directly to what they do and what they are hiring for.
  • Multitasking During Video Sessions: Recruiters on camera can see when your eyes are elsewhere. Close the other tabs and give each session your full attention.
  • Going Silent in Group Sessions: You don’t need to dominate the conversation, but asking one good, specific question is enough to get noticed. Staying quiet the entire session means you leave no impression at all.

Your Virtual Career Fair Game Plan 

A virtual career fair can open real doors. But only if you show up ready.

Do the work before you log in. Research the companies you care about, prepare your elevator pitch, and sort your resume and tech the night before. The candidates who walk in prepared are the ones recruiters remember.

During the fair, be present. Ask specific questions. Start conversations with intention and end every 1:1 with a clear next step. Don’t wait for opportunities to come to you.

And when the fair ends, follow up. A short, specific email within 24 to 48 hours and a LinkedIn connection with a personal note takes ten minutes and keeps your name at the top of the pile.

Want to run a virtual career fair that actually works for candidates? Book a demo to see how vFairs makes it happen.

FAQs

How do I introduce myself at a virtual career fair?

Start with your name, your background, and what you’re looking for in 30 seconds or less. Instead of “I’m looking for opportunities in marketing,” try “I’m a marketing graduate with experience in content strategy, looking to grow in that direction.” Practice it out loud before the fair so it feels natural.

What should I prepare before a virtual career fair?

Update your resume and save it as a PDF. Fill out your candidate profile on the platform completely. Research the companies you’re targeting, look up attending recruiters on LinkedIn, and write out your elevator pitch. Prepare at least three questions per employer and test your mic, camera, and internet the night before.

What questions should I ask recruiters at a virtual career fair?

Ask questions specific to the role, the team, or the company’s direction. Good ones include “What does success look like in this role in the first six months?” and “How has the company evolved in the last couple of years?” Avoid anything easily found on the company website.

How do I stand out at a virtual career fair?

Research the company beforehand, come with prepared questions, and follow up afterward. Most candidates skip at least one of these. During the fair, engage actively in webinars, be specific in your questions, and go into every 1:1 with a clear goal.

What Should I Wear to a Virtual Career Fair?

Dress the same way you would for an in-person interview. Business casual is a safe default: a clean, pressed shirt or blouse works well for most industries. Avoid busy patterns or bright colors that can be distracting on camera. Even if the session doesn’t require video, being dressed and ready puts you in the right headspace and means you’re prepared if a recruiter asks to switch to video.

How to Start a Conversation at a Virtual Career Fair

Romanna

Romanna works in event tech at vFairs, where she loves finding creative ways to make virtual and hybrid events come to life. She’s always tinkering with new tools to make everything run smoothly, but when she's not at her computer, you’ll find her testing out new recipes in the kitchen or planning her next adventure to somewhere exciting.

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