Expert Tips
for Simpler,
More Refined Livestreaming

Expert Tips
for Simpler,
More Refined Livestreaming


Quality audio should be your top priority when streaming.
Fixing your audio isn't always about better equipment. Attention to mic placement, audio capture, and a simple sound check can go a long way.
Goals:
☐ Guests hear each speaker clearly without adjusting volume
☐ Audio feels warm and present, not distant or echoey
☐ Music and spoken tributes captured with clarity & balance
1. Get Your Microphone Closer
If the mic isn't close enough, your audio won't be clear.
Always use dedicated microphones for your live stream. Never rely on your camera's built-in mic. Place microphones as close as possible to where people will speak, sing or perform. When available, the best audio will come directly from an in-house mixing board or amplifier.
2. Use More than One Microphone
No single microphone can capture every moment clearly—especially in larger spaces or echo-prone churches.
Use at least two microphones: One at the main podium and the other 2-3 feet from a loudspeaker to capture pre-recorded music and audio from the clergy's own lavalier mic.
3. Do a Mic Check
Before going live for online guests, begin streaming from your camera at least 20 minutes before the service to ensure your audio is clean and clear. Foveo's live monitoring and support team can assist you with this every time.
Equipment Tip:
Wireless mic kits, like the RODE Wireless GO 3, are an excellent and affordable option for professional audio. Anyone can use them to capture clean, consistent audio. They also automatically adjust to soft or very loud voices and provide a local backup recording.
Hear the Difference for Yourself.

What happens after the live stream matters just as much.
When a funeral is live streamed smoothly, families are deeply grateful. But what happens next can quietly introduce complexity.
The Reality
Most funeral services include music. And while you can legally live stream with the right licenses, sharing the recording afterward is not as simple.
Posting recordings publicly can introduce:
- Licensing uncertainty
- Ongoing compliance questions
- Additional steps, edits, or restrictions
What should have been simple…becomes complicated.
Addressing Complexity
Families don't see complexity. They see you.
Many families want to revisit the recording or share it with others who couldn't attend. They expect simple access to the recording and a private, respectful experience, without barriers or confusion.
For families, it's not public media content. It's a lasting record of a personally meaningful moment.
To address the risks, streaming platforms may add copyrighted music detection or muting services or spend time editing recordings to respect copyright laws. This can add complexity, and none of it improves the family experience.
A Shift in Approach
To families, the live stream recording is not media content. It's a family's memory, entrusted to your care.
Designed for Simplicity from the Start
To help you manage recordings with care and respect, Foveo handles recordings differently:
- ✓ Private family access
- ✓ Limited guest access from the start
- ✓ No public posting is required
- ✓ No editing, muting, or follow-up
See How It Works
Private delivery. No complexity. No follow-up required.

You're accustomed to responding, "Yes, we'll take care of that for you."
But when a family ask you to live stream, the solution doesn't have to mean more work or stress.
For Tukios customers, the answer is "Just One Click."
Foveo's one-click live stream integration lets you open an obituary page, toggle Live Stream, and click save. That's it!
The broadcast gets booked, a player gets added to the obituary page, and the family gets an email with all the details–automatically.
- No switching between platforms.
- No copying and pasting links.
- No adding an embed code.
- No need to apologize to the family.
We put simple, reliable, professional live streaming straight into a workflow your directors already know.
Why This Matters
Planning a live stream can feel complex and raise anxiety levels: accessing multiple digital platforms, deciding what has to be done manually, contemplating what might go wrong, sharing link information with the family, and identifying what needs to be managed afterwards.
Because families turn to you when they need things to be simple, you need a simple solution that allows you to respond promptly and with confidence.
We created One-Click Streaming with Tukios for moments when a simple, seamless streaming experience is what everyone needs.
The Simple Advantage
No one wants to add complexity to a carefully crafted moment. That's why streaming should be fittingly simple, too.
- Simple to Schedule
- Simple to Personalize
- Simple to Deliver
- Simple to Watch
Tukios customers have nothing to worry about and even less to do with Foveo—at exactly the moment when simplicity and confidence matter most.
Looking for Peace of Mind? Experience it for yourself.
See how Foveo makes one-click streaming simple for Tukios customers.

Families Ask for Live Streaming when Someone Can't Come.
Someone suddenly falls ill. A family member gets stranded in an airport. A sister wonders, "Did we tell Uncle Dan?"
Just minutes before the service begins, the family may ask you: "Is there any way we can live stream this?"
In that moment, your challenge isn't technical. It's operational.
What Makes That Moment Difficult?
Most funeral streaming setups require time and planning:
- Sign in to schedule a live stream
- Ensure your equipment is ready
- Share family and guest links
- Assign staff to manage the broadcast
But urgent requests don't follow familiar patterns. They come when time is limited, your focus is elsewhere, and added steps only increase the pressure.
The Insight: If live streaming feels complicated, it becomes harder to say yes when it matters most.
The Shift: Make live streaming simple enough to initiate instantly, wherever you are and with what you already have.
The Practical Truth: In a matter of minutes, without breaking stride, you need to:
- Schedule a service
- Share secure access
- Start streaming
No scrambling. No trade-offs. No changes to plans.
The Point: Families don't see live streaming as a technical hurdle. It's the difference between someone being included or left out. For you, it's the ability to respond to family requests with confidence—to say "yes" without hesitation.
Aim for Simple: When evaluating how you stream for families, ask yourself:
- Can I confidently say yes to a live stream request five minutes before the service starts?
- What's making it harder than it needs to be?
Built for Your Reality
DirectorView™ allows you to schedule, stream, and manage services from your phone—so you can respond immediately when the unexpected happens.

Worry-Free Funeral Live Streaming Comes Down to Support
Reliable funeral live streaming isn't determined by equipment or preparation alone. It's defined in the moment something unexpected happens—and you need someone to help.
Even experienced teams run into situations like:
- Equipment left behind
- Internet connectivity issues
- Last-minute changes or requests
- Online guests needing help accessing the stream
What Makes Streaming Worry-Free?
Preparation and technology matter—but they're not the difference. The difference is being ready to handle what happens at service time.
To deliver consistent, professional experiences for every family, you need more than tools.
You need:
Behind-the-scenes monitoring
Support that catches issues early and helps keep everything on track.
Real-time support
Someone available immediately with clear, practical guidance.
A simple backup option
The ability to switch instantly—like streaming from your phone or capturing a recording—without more than a couple of taps.
Guest communication handled
So families and staff don't have to manage questions, delays, or confusion.
The Streaming Standard to Aim For
A well-supported funeral live stream means:
- You start on time—even if something changes
- You stay focused on the family
- Online guests feel informed and cared for
- Issues are handled quietly, without disruption
The Takeaway
The unexpected will happen.
The difference is knowing you don't have to handle it alone.
Talk to us. We're here for you.

As a funeral director, success can be difficult to measure.
Thank you notes are one of the clearest signals a family felt truly cared for. Expressions of thanks from online guests can be just as powerful.
Attending from Poland, Elzbieta experienced a very meaningful moment. She shared this:
"Thank you very much…
I felt as if I was there together with my family."
Modern, refined livestreaming makes this possible.
It's not just about access—it's about connection.
Livestreaming reaches more people than many funeral homes realize. Our experience and data suggest the average livestream connects more than 30 guests, roughly 9 of whom live and work in the communities you serve.
You are providing guests with a meaningful service. They're paying attention—and they'll remember how you made a difficult moment easier.
If you still approach livestreaming primarily as a technical task—is the camera charged? internet signal strong? audio clear?—you may be missing the opportunity to deliver an experience that exceeds families' expectations.
Families don't separate the livestream experience from their funeral home experience. To them, it is all part of the same expression of care — so it demands the same attention to detail.
How to Design Livestreams People Feel Grateful For
1. Make Remote Guests Feel Expected
Remote guests should never feel like an afterthought. Simple details make a meaningful difference:
- clear instructions
- thoughtful communication
- a welcoming broadcast page
- reassuring cues before the service begins
When people feel intentionally included, the experience immediately becomes more personal and meaningful.
2. Reduce Emotional Friction
Online guests are also grieving. Often elderly or unsteady with technology, even small moments of uncertainty can weaken the experience.
Thoughtful livestreaming helps each guest feel guided and reassured—so they can remain emotionally present, rather than frustrated or distracted.
3. Treat Livestreaming as an Extension of Your Care
Your livestream experience will introduce many new families to your funeral home and your standard of care. We recommend paying careful attention to the following:
- Make high-quality audio a priority
- Make it easy for guests to find and access the broadcast
- Train key team members to be able to assist other staff
- Communicate clearly and offer support for guests
4. Create Opportunities for Continued Connection
When you livestream, the goal is not simply to broadcast the funeral. It's to help families and friends to connect .
In that moment, livestreaming also quietly introduces your funeral home to siblings, sons, daughters, extended family members, friends, and local community members in a deeply personal way. That audience is often uniquely attentive to thoughtful advice and the information you can provide.
These future decision-makers and influencers have experienced the quality of your care firsthand. You're already creating and strengthening key relationships built on respect, trust, and gratitude.
If you want more thank-you-note moments, like Elzbieta's, design your experiences with the audience in mind.

Keep livestream access simple so your staff can stay focused on the family in front of them.
Every funeral home has heard from someone like Aunt Sally.
She calls ten minutes before the service begins. She wants to watch the funeral, but she cannot find the link.
To a guest, this feels like a crisis. To your staff, it becomes an urgent priority competing with everything else they need to attend to before the service begins.
Now staff are searching emails, checking worksheets, and trying to resolve an access problem at the worst possible moment.
The family is waiting.
The clergy is ready.
The service should be starting.
The best way to prevent this situation is to stop treating the livestream link like something separate from the funeral. Build it into the place everyone already goes for service information: your funeral home's website.
When the viewing experience is built directly into the obituary page, families do not need to send a special link. Guests do not need to search through their email inbox. And your staff do not need to scramble when someone calls moments before the service begins.
Create one clear place to go. And if you do livestream to a private page or public platform, make sure the link everyone needs is clearly posted on the obituary page.
That simple change can make a major difference. Families can confidently tell relatives and friends, "Just go to the obituary page."
This is important because families are often under pressure, too. They're answering calls, forwarding emails, and trying to help elderly relatives get connected before the service.
Give them a simpler way to communicate about the livestream broadcast. Instead of explaining which email, which link, or which platform to open, they can share one simple instruction with everyone: go to the obituary page.
Online guests will know where to look.
Staff are less likely to be pulled away from the service.
And when someone still needs help, there should be a simple path to reliable support that does not put more pressure on your team.
A good livestreaming process should reduce pressure on the day of the funeral, not add to it.
If online guests are expected, make access obvious, familiar, and easy to explain. The fewer separate links, emails, and instructions involved, the better.
Ask yourself a simple question: if an online guest wanted to attend the livestream but could not find the link, would they still know where to go?
Recap:
Keep livestream access simple so your staff can stay focused on the family in front of them.
Make broadcasts easy to find in the same place guests go for service details.
One clear destination reduces confusion, cuts down on last-minute calls, and helps online guests feel cared for before the service even begins.

A livestream can technically be working and still not be delivering the experience you want.
The stream can be live.
The audio can be clear.
The link can work.
The camera can be connected.
And yet, something can still be wrong.
This is perhaps the biggest challenge of funeral livestreaming.
The people responsible for the service are usually standing in the room, unable to check the broadcast. Their attention needs to be with the family, the clergy, the in-person guests, and the flow of the ceremony.
But online guests experience the service through a completely different lens.
They can't feel the calm of the room.
They are limited to what the camera sees.
What the mics and audio system pick up.
They notice focus, view angles, straightness, frozen frames, muted microphones and unexpected obstructions.
If no one is monitoring the online guest experience, little things can quietly become real issues that can spoil the online experience for everyone.
Going LIVE doesn't mean you can stop watching.
Live monitoring matters because nearly all livestream problems are invisible from inside the chapel.
A funeral director is unlikely to know:
their camera is hunting for focus,
the podium is slightly out of frame,
their mic audio is too quiet,
the camera was bumped by a guest,
or someone at home needs help connecting.
None of these issues mean the funeral director did anything wrong. They simply demonstrate why funeral livestreaming, done well, relies on a second set of eyes and ears.
Your staff should not have to divide their attention between the family in the chapel and the guests watching online. They shouldn't have to wonder whether the livestream looks and sounds right. And they shouldn't have to wait until the service is over to find out whether something went wrong.
Funeral livestreaming is more than a technical task. It is part of the funeral experience. For many family members and friends, especially those who cannot attend in person, your livestream offers a meaningful way to be present. That experience deserves the same attention to detail and support as any other.
What You Can Do
Don't wait until a service is over to know whether your livestream worked.
Make sure someone is watching the broadcast while there is still time to fix the little things: the focus, the framing, the sound, the connection, and the online guest experience.
With Foveo's DirectorCare™, your funeral home has specially trained eyes and ears on every livestream, helping you identify and resolve issues before they affect family and friends watching online.
Stay focused on the room.
We're watching the livestream for you.
Plan for What You Can't Control
What happens when the Signal disappears? Surrounded by rolling hills and mature maples, Pleasant View Cemetery is an oasis of peace. Five miles outside of town, it is the quiet final resting place of some of the area's most notable citizens. Unfortunately, it seems it's also where mobile internet signals lay themselves to rest.
That's why, when funeral director Mark Benson arrived with the family that morning, he opened the DirectorView™ app on his phone and checked the local upload speed.
At less than 8 Mbps, the app confirmed what Mark already suspected: the connection at Pleasant View would be too weak to livestream reliably.
A few years ago, this would have been a real problem. Especially with loved ones waiting online.
But Mark was Ready.
Days before the service, he had already explained the fallback plan to the family: "We'll test the internet signal when we arrive. If it's strong enough, we'll livestream. If it isn't, we'll record everything offline and upload the recording as soon as we're back at the funeral home."
So there was no panic. No scrambling. No awkward uncertainty. No hoping the signal might magically improve between the invocation and committal.
Mark informed the family, opened the Stream in DirectorView™, and switched to Offline Recording.
He also sent a short message to Foveo's DirectorCare™ team. They posted a Guest Advisory to let registered guests know the service was being recorded and would be available as soon as it was uploaded.
The ceremony proceeded as planned. Mark stayed focused on the family. The family stayed focused on the committal. In that moment, the internet no longer mattered.
Back in his office, Mark reopened DirectorView™, tapped the recording, and tapped upload. The recording posted directly to the obituary page for the family and registered guests to watch. That was it.
DirectorView™ was exactly what Mark needed to prepare and execute a reliable fallback plan.
The Lesson
Livestreaming depends on many layers of technology:
Cameras. Microphones. Encoders. Apps. Mobile Internet.
Most of the time, everything works well. But sometimes, something beyond your control fails.
In those high-pressure moments, when the signal disappears, your staff should never have to improvise. They shouldn't be searching for reasons and excuses to give the family. And they shouldn't leave any online guests wondering why the broadcast hasn't started.
Have a Reliable Backup Plan.
Ensure your funeral home has a simple, reliable fallback plan when livestreaming for families from cemeteries, churches, community halls, rural locations, or anywhere else the internet might prove unreliable.
Our DirectorView™ app allows your staff to test their streaming connection, switch to Offline Recording when needed, and upload completed recordings directly to the obituary page with a single tap.
With Foveo's DirectorCare™ team behind you every time you stream, you have access to immediate support and advice, and registered guests can be kept informed when a service has to be recorded instead of livestreamed.
Make it easy for your staff to stay focused on the family. And offer bereaved families greater peace-of-mind, knowing the moment is still being captured.
What Matters Most.
The best funeral livestreaming is not only about what happens when everything works. It's also about what happens when something doesn't.
Foveo helps funeral homes deliver simple, supported, reliable livestream experiences — including practical fallback options, like Offline Recording, for those moments when internet access becomes a factor beyond your control.
Because even when the signal disappears, a family's confidence in your care doesn't have to disappear with it.
Need a better fallback plan?
→ See how Foveo helps your team stay ready, supported, and focused on the family.
Livestream when the room is too small for the people who need to be there.
Not every funeral takes place in a large chapel with plenty of seating, a built-in sound system, and a convenient overflow area.
Sometimes the right place to say goodbye is a small country church or another meaningful location that was never designed to hold everyone who wants to attend. That was the case for one family in central Alberta.
They chose to hold their mother's funeral service in an historic old church on the grounds of the Sunnybrook Farm Museum. It was a deeply meaningful place. She had grown up playing the organ there each week, and even though the church had been moved from its original home to the museum years earlier, it was where the family wanted to gather to say farewell.
But the chapel was small. Only about 40 people could fit inside. In the middle of winter, with coats, hats, and boots, even that was a squeeze. The family needed a way to include more people without taking away from the intimacy of the service.
Their funeral director suggested a simple solution. She found a cozy classroom in the administration building next door that they could use as an overflow room.
Instead of trying to run cables between buildings or asking guests to crowd into the chapel, the service was livestreamed to the overflow space. Those who could not fit inside the church were still able to gather nearby, watch the service together, and remain part of the day.
When the casket was carried to the hearse, they were close enough to come outside and stand with the family. It was not a compromise. It was a thoughtful extension of the service.
Overflow streaming is not just for large funerals
When most people think about funeral livestreaming, they're thinking about distant guests — family members across the country, friends overseas, or people too ill or elderly to attend in person.
But livestreaming can also solve a very local problem: the room is full.
Livestreaming allows the funeral director to preserve the intimacy of the chosen venue while still caring for everyone who came to support the family.
A better overflow experience
An overflow room should not feel like an afterthought. The goal is to help overflow guests feel connected to what is happening.
To livestream to your overflow room, you'll need:
- An internet-connected camera mobile camera with DirectorView installed
- A reliable internet connection in the service location and in the overflow room.
- A computer connected to a large TV screen or projector in the overflow room.
- Someone assigned to confirm the stream is playing properly before the service begins.
- A plan for whether overflow guests can join the family for the procession, committal, or reception.
The funeral director's role
In the story above, the livestream option was possible because the funeral director understood seating for everyone could become a problem. And she had time to consider the options. Rather than forcing the family to choose between a meaningful location and a practical one, she used livestreaming to help them have both. That is the real value of overflow streaming. It gives you another way to serve families with flexibility, creativity, and care.
Livestreaming is not only for people far away. Its for creating simple ceremonies that everyone who matters can attend.
→ See how Foveo helps your team care for every guest — even when the room is full.
"Like having a streaming expert on your team."
Ensure every online guest is cared for — even when your team is busiest.
The moments right before a funeral begins can be among the busiest of the day.
Family is arriving. Flowers are being placed. Staff are greeting guests. The director is focused on the family and all the details that need to happen in the room.
Then the phone rings. Someone needs help accessing the livestream. The last thing your team needs is a new problem that may take patience and specialized knowledge to solve.
But those callers are not interruptions. They are family members and friends trying to be present for the people they love. They may be across the country, in a care facility, at work, or simply unable to attend in person. The livestream is their way of being there.
Extended reach creates an expanded need for care
Livestreaming allows families to include more people than ever before. It also means your funeral home may be expected to support guests who are not physically in the building, often at the very moment your staff is least available.
This is when DirectorCare™ by Foveo can make the biggest difference.
DirectorCare™ is like having an expert on your team every time you livestream. It is not just technical support for your staff. Foveo also supports online guests and bereaved families, providing timely, expert help that reflects the standard of care your funeral home is known for.
If a guest needs help joining the livestream, your team does not have to stop what they are doing, troubleshoot audio settings, explain where to click, or talk someone through the process while a service is about to begin. They can direct the guest to Foveo for help.
And because live monitoring and support are included in every Foveo plan, your funeral home is not left alone when something needs attention.
Online guest support is part of the funeral experience
When most people think about funeral livestreaming, they think about the camera, the internet connection, and the recording. But the guest experience matters too.
For the family, the livestream is not just a video feed. It is how people who cannot attend in person are still able to participate that day. If someone cannot get into the stream, hear the audio, or find a link, the experience can feel frustrating, isolating, and emotionally difficult.
DirectorCare™ helps you bridge that gap. It gives online guests a clear place to turn for help, while allowing your staff to stay focused on the family and the service happening in front of them.
And if you have Foveo's guest registration enabled for your livestreams, online guests automatically receive Foveo's contact information so they know where to turn if they have questions about the livestream.
A better support experience for online guests
Online guest support should feel calm, simple, and reassuring.
To make that possible, your funeral home should have:
- A clear support option for livestream guests who need help.
- Staff who know where to direct callers when livestream questions come in.
- A livestream experience that is monitored before and during the service.
- A support team that understands both the technology and the sensitivity of the moment.
- A plan that keeps funeral home staff focused on the family, not last-minute troubleshooting.
With DirectorCare™, Foveo helps provide that support. You have kind, compassionate, funeral-trained experts working with you to deliver the care online guests may need.
A funeral director's role
Funeral directors already carry a great deal of responsibility on the day of the service. Their focus must remain on the family and the here and now.
DirectorCare™ gives funeral professionals another layer of support at exactly the moment it is needed most. It helps protect a director's focus, supports online guests, and extends the same care and attention to detail your staff provides to everyone else in the room.
Livestreaming is not only about making a service available online. It is about making sure the people who need to be there can attend in a comforting and meaningful way.
And when they need help, your staff can carry on, assured that online guests are being cared for.
Don't Let Streaming Get You Down
Ensure every online guest is cared for — even when your team is busiest.
Many funeral directors–possibly even you–have experienced a terrifying moment operating a livestream camera on your own.
When you agreed to livestream, it seemed simple enough.
But then the calls start.
A granddaughter can't find the link. An uncle can't hear the audio. Someone else is trying to join from another country and isn't sure if they're in the right place.
Before you know it, you've spent 45 minutes troubleshooting technology when you should be focusing on the service ahead.
And the timing is never ideal.
The family is arriving. Staff are preparing the chapel. Last-minute details need attention. Somehow, you've unofficially become the lead stream support technician.
A Better Approach
When livestreaming is backed by a dedicated support team, viewers have someone to turn to when they need help. Whether it's finding a livestream link, troubleshooting audio, or answering questions about how to watch, dedicated streaming experts can help handle those requests.
That means fewer interruptions for your team and a smoother experience for the people watching remotely.
It also means greater confidence for families. When they know help is available, they're less worried about whether grandparents across the country or relatives overseas will be able to participate in the service. They know that if someone encounters a problem, there is a knowledgeable person ready to assist.
The result is a better experience for everyone involved. Funeral home staff stay focused on the service. Remote attendees get the support they need.
Because the goal of livestreaming isn't simply to make a service available online. It's to help people be present for an important moment, and that experience should be as seamless as possible.
What They Don't See
The best funerals share one thing in common: the family never sees all of the work and preparation that made everything feel so effortless. Every detail, from arranging overflow seating to resolving last-minute issues with your florist, happens quietly, behind the scenes, so the family can remain truly focused on what matters most.
Great livestream experiences work the same way.
Here are a few ways you can create seamless experiences for every guest, whether they're in the room or attending remotely from somewhere else.
Consider your Online Guests from the Start
The livestream is never just about having a connected camera in the chapel. It live broadcast is part of the total funeral experience for family members and their online guests. For so many, it may be the only way they'll be able to attend the service. That's why carefully considering the position and vantage point of your camera, the location and number of microphones you will use, and the organization of any tribute videos or recordings that ought to be integrated into the broadcast experience are all essential details to plan for from the start.
Keep your Tech Simple
The day of the funeral is never a good time to get reacquainted with complex or outdated streaming equipment. Give yourself the benefit of a streaming system that is easy to set up and stream with, that is easy to test your audio and video and monitor the broadcast on, and that requires little or no attention during the service.
Plan for the Unexpected
Even the most carefully planned service can have surprises. A network outage or weak WiFi signal shouldn't mean missing an important moment. Your livestreaming solution should record automatically or allow you to record without the internet. This way, families can still access a complete recording afterwards, even when something goes wrong.
Practice Makes Perfect
Consider training one or two staff members to be your livestream experts because every minute your team spends working on the technology is time they can't be there for the family.
Livestreaming should feel like every other part of a well-run funeral service: fully in the director's control and exactly what the family expected. That's how directors can gain confidence in livestreaming for families.
Let's Talk
Tell us about the livestreaming challenges you face. One of our DirectorCare™ experts will be happy to help you address your specific questions or concerns.
Call us or arrange a personal, expert consultation (for free, of course).
Never Get Caught Unprepared
The simplest way to assure the success of every funeral livestream broadcast is to plan time for checking your video connection and broadcast audio before it's time to go live for online guests.
Leave Yourself Enough Time
Of course, it doesn't sound revolutionary, but having enough time to run two simple checks and, if necessary, to reach an expert for help if you have a question is the difference between peace-of-mind and later hearing that guests couldn't hear the broadcast. We recommend spending 3-5 minutes at least 20-30 minutes before the service to ensure the quality of your livestream is exactly what you and the family expect it to be.
The Video Check:
Confirm your video signal is streaming to Foveo using the DirectorView™ app on your phone or signing in to Foveo.app on a computer. Ensure your camera is straight, the scene is well-framed, the lens is clean, and the lighting in the room is bright enough to see who's speaking (but not shining into the camera so brightly that you cannot see who it is). If you're using a mobile camera device, make sure your device is safely mounted on its tripod, fully charged, and that you have a backup battery nearby, just in case.
The Audio Check:
Confirm that your house mics or wireless mics are charged, turned on, and connected. Open DirectorView™ on your phone to hear whether the audio from your mics is coming through loudly and clearly.
Conducting these two simple checks ahead of time will give you something very difficult to find once guests start to arrive: time to address any minor issues.
What if I run into something unexpected?
Remember, you never have to livestream alone. Our DirectorCare™ team is always ready to assist you with a pre-stream audio and video check. They can answer any questions you may have and help you troubleshoot anything you're concerned about. Working with an expert will keep pre-stream questions from becoming last-minute issues or even problems.
It's just like setting up the chapel ahead of time. You would never wait to set up chairs until just before the family and first guests arrive. If your livestream is viewed as part of the same overall guest experience, it will get the same level of preparation and attention as every other detail.
That 20-30 minute head start will allow you to serve families with greater confidence and assurance. Knowing everything is ready and working ahead of time will enable you to focus on what's most important: the family standing in front of you.
Learn more about how Foveo can simplify and refine your livestream experience.





