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	<title>SmartAss Guide - Sevenelles</title>
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		<title>Expand Your Adobe Connect Audience with a YouTube Livestream</title>
		<link>https://sevenelles.com/expand-your-adobe-connect-audience-with-a-youtube-livestream/</link>
					<comments>https://sevenelles.com/expand-your-adobe-connect-audience-with-a-youtube-livestream/#comments</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jeff Kelly]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Feb 2026 23:46:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Learn]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Many thanks to Misty Sybert for brilliant testing and editing! Adobe Connect completely blows MS Teams and Zoom out of the water when it comes to producing dynamic, engaging learning events. (I mean, what the hell happened to Zoom? It started out pretty good. Then, COVID struck, and it began to metastasize into an unwieldy,&#8230;&#160;<a href="https://sevenelles.com/expand-your-adobe-connect-audience-with-a-youtube-livestream/" rel="bookmark">Read More &#187;<span class="screen-reader-text">Expand Your Adobe Connect Audience with a YouTube Livestream</span></a></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://sevenelles.com/expand-your-adobe-connect-audience-with-a-youtube-livestream/">Expand Your Adobe Connect Audience with a YouTube Livestream</a> first appeared on <a href="https://sevenelles.com">Sevenelles</a>.</p>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="has-text-align-center"><em>Many thanks to Misty Sybert for brilliant testing and editing</em>!</p>



<p>Adobe Connect completely blows MS Teams and Zoom out of the water when it comes to producing dynamic, engaging learning events.  (I mean, what the hell happened to Zoom? It started out pretty good. Then, COVID struck, and it began to metastasize into an unwieldy, ADHD-driven exercise in unfocused feature bloat. It is nearly unusable anymore. But I digress&#8230;)</p>



<p>So Adobe Connect is THE best platform for you to produce a bitchin&#8217; worldwide learning broadcast. But, depending on your Adobe license, you may have only 500 seats for learners. The result: Thousands of people who <em>would</em> attend your totally bitchin&#8217; learning broadcast are left out in the cold.</p>



<p>This <em>SmartAss Guide</em> will show you how to punch through that ceiling by simultaneously broadcasting your Adobe Connect Seminar as a YouTube Livestream, while still tracking <strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">ALL</span></strong> the attendance inside Adobe Connect using a two-Event setup and a Registration Group. It is not an obvious solution. Perhaps it is not the elegant solution. It is, however, the solution that has worked for me for many years.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">In this Guide, You Will Learn To:</h2>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li>Use two Adobe Connect (AC) Events in tandem to track attendance for a live learning broadcast hosted in an AC Seminar and simultaneously broadcast via YouTube (YT) Livestream</li>



<li>Create an AC HTML Content object that serves as a &#8220;wrapper&#8221; around your YT Livestream so AC can track YouTube attendees</li>



<li>Create a Registration Group in AC to connect the two Events so that registering for one automatically enrolls participants in both</li>



<li>Configure the full broadcast workflow from setup through broadcast day — including the YouTube and OBS pieces that make the whole thing run</li>
</ul>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">You Will Need:</h2>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li>An Adobe Connect <strong>admin account</strong>. Not a host account. Not a limited admin. A full admin. The Registration Group step (Step 5) is admin-only — there is no workaround.</li>



<li>A <strong><a href="https://studio.youtube.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">YouTube Studio</a> (YT) account</strong> to create your broadcast Livestream link — <strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">OR</span></strong> the YT link handed to you by whoever in your organization is handling the livestream side.</li>



<li>If you are handling the YT Livestream yourself: a dedicated PC running the free, open-source <strong><a href="https://obsproject.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Open Broadcaster Software (OBS)</a></strong> to capture the AC broadcast and pipe it to YouTube. Setting up OBS end-to-end is outside the scope of this guide — see the <a href="#references">References section</a> below for resources to get up to speed.</li>



<li><strong>Solid experience in the AC admin interface.</strong> If you need a refresher on AC administration basics, <a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/adobe-connect/using/user-guide.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Adobe&#8217;s official User Guide</a> is a reasonable starting point.</li>



<li><strong>Experience creating and administering AC Events, Seminars, and Content.</strong> This guide assumes you have done all three before. If Events are new territory, work through <a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/adobe-connect/using/connect-events.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Adobe&#8217;s Events overview</a> and the <a href="https://blogs.adobe.com/connectsupport/how-what-is-needed-to-create-new-events/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Adobe Connect Blog&#8217;s event creation walkthrough</a> before proceeding.</li>
</ul>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">The Steps:</h2>



<ol style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list has-medium-font-size">
<li><a href="#step1">Create the AC Seminar where you will host the broadcast</a></li>



<li><a href="#step2">Create the AC HTML Content object that will wrap around the Livestream</a></li>



<li><a href="#step3">Create your Main AC Event and link it to your Seminar</a></li>



<li><a href="#step4">Create your Secondary AC Event and link it to your HTML Content object</a></li>



<li><a href="#step5">Connect the two Events using an AC Registration Group</a></li>



<li><a href="#step6">Advertise the registration link to your Main AC Event</a></li>



<li><a href="#step7">Create your YT Livestream and link it to the HTML Content object</a></li>



<li><a href="#step8">Broadcast Day: Final check and log-in links</a></li>
</ol>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="step1">Step 1: Create the Broadcast&#8217;s AC Seminar</h2>



<p>If you have not already created the main AC Seminar you will use for your broadcast, do that now. If you need a refresher on creating Seminars, <a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/adobe-connect/using/creating-seminars.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Adobe&#8217;s Seminar documentation</a> has you covered. We are not going to walk through it here — this is not that kind of guide.</p>



<p style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)"><strong>NOTE:</strong> This tutorial assumes you are using an <strong>AC Seminar room</strong> — not an AC Meeting room — for your broadcast. Seminars are purpose-built for large audiences (up to 1,500 participants), offer a proper broadcast-style layout, and are the right tool for this job. If you are running a Meeting room instead, some of the steps below will look different and your AC audience ceiling will be considerably lower (but the YT Livestream audience will still be unlimited).</p>



<p class="has-neve-link-hover-color-background-color has-background" style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)"><strong>Let&#8217;s begin a running example:</strong> Throughout this Guide, we will &#8220;illustrate&#8221; the steps via examples. To kickoff the example, we will name our Seminar <em>&#8220;My Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Seminar.&#8221;</em> Swap in your actual Seminar name wherever you see this throughout the guide.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="step2">Step 2: Create the Broadcast&#8217;s AC HTML Content Object</h2>



<p>Now we will create an AC HTML Content object that will be linked to the Secondary AC Event you will create in Step 4. This is the piece that makes YouTube attendance tracking possible inside Adobe Connect — a small but clever bit of contortion that lets AC &#8220;see&#8221; viewers who are actually watching on YouTube. If you need a refresher on uploading HTML content to AC, <a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/adobe-connect/using/meeting-basics.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Adobe&#8217;s meeting and content documentation</a> covers the basics.</p>



<p>This step has two parts.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="step2-1">Step 2.1 — Create the iFrame HTML file</h3>



<p>You need to create a small HTML file containing an iFrame that embeds your YouTube Livestream. Here is the code that gets the job done:</p>



<pre class="wp-block-preformatted">&lt;!DOCTYPE html&gt;
&lt;html lang="en"&gt;
&lt;head&gt;
    &lt;title&gt;Bitchin' Broadcast Livestream Wrapper&lt;/title&gt;
&lt;/head&gt;
&lt;body style="background-color:black;"&gt;
    &lt;div style="position: relative; width: 100%; padding-bottom: 56.25%;"&gt;
        &lt;iframe
            style="position: absolute; width: 100%; height: 100%; left: 0; top: 0; border: 0;"
            src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/XbcJGxHHozk?autoplay=1"
            allowfullscreen&gt;
        &lt;/iframe&gt;
    &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/body&gt;
&lt;/html&gt;</pre>



<p>A few things worth noting about this code:</p>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li>The <code>padding-bottom: 56.25%</code> on the outer div is what maintains a proper 16:9 aspect ratio at any screen size. Leave it alone.</li>



<li>The <code>?autoplay=1</code> parameter at the end of the YouTube URL forces the video to start playing automatically when a participant opens the Content object. This matters — without it, your YouTube viewers will land on a static screen and wonder why nothing is happening.</li>



<li>The YouTube video ID in the URL — <code>XbcJGxHHozk</code> in the example — is a placeholder. You will replace it with your actual Livestream ID in Step 7. Leave it as-is for now.</li>



<li>The black background (<code>background-color:black</code>) is purely aesthetic — it keeps the page from looking broken while the video loads.</li>
</ul>



<p>Copy the code above into your favorite text editor. On Windows, <a href="https://notepad-plus-plus.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Notepad++</a> (free) is a solid choice. Plain old Notepad works fine too. On Mac, TextEdit will do — just make sure you save in plain text format, not rich text. Make sure you use the .html extension when you save it — AC will not recognize the file as HTML content without it.</p>



<p class="has-neve-link-hover-color-background-color has-background" style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)"><strong>Our running example:</strong> Save the file as <em>&#8220;Bitchin-Broadcast-iFrame-Code.html&#8221;</em>. Make sure you use the <strong>.html extension</strong> when you save it — AC will not recognize the file as HTML content without it.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="step2-2">Step 2.2 — Upload the HTML file to AC Content</h3>



<p>Now upload the HTML file you just saved to the Content section of Adobe Connect Central. As an experienced AC Admin, you have done this a hundred times. Navigate to your Content library, find or create a folder for this broadcast, and upload the file.</p>



<p class="has-neve-link-hover-color-background-color has-background" style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)"><strong>Our running example:</strong> We are saving the HTML in a dedicated folder for this broadcast inside the AC Shared Content folder. We will name the Content object <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast iFrame HTML.&#8221;</em></p>



<p>With the Seminar and the HTML Content object both in place, you are ready to build the two AC Events that will tie everything together.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="step3">Step 3: Create Your Main AC Event</h2>



<p>We are not going to walk through the full Event creation wizard here — you know how to create an AC Event. If you need a quick refresher, <a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/adobe-connect/using/creating-editing-events.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Adobe&#8217;s Event creation documentation</a> is thorough. What matters are these specifics:</p>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li>On the <strong>Enter Event Information</strong> page, in the <strong>Custom URL</strong> section, we recommend that you create a custom name so that your registration URL will be attractive. For our custom URL, we will use &#8220;bitchin-broadcast-2026&#8221;</li>



<li>On the <strong>Enter Event Information</strong> page, in the <strong>Presentation</strong> section, select <strong>&#8220;Present an Adobe Connect Seminar.&#8221;</strong></li>



<li>If your broadcast runs over multiple days, you can only configure the Event for the first day during initial setup. You will need to address subsequent days separately. We will discuss that more in Step 8.</li>



<li>When you reach the <strong>Select Content</strong> step, select the AC Seminar you created in Step 1 — <em>&#8220;My Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Seminar.&#8221;</em></li>



<li>Set up your registration questions, email options, and other settings as you normally would for a public-facing event. This is the Event your audience will see and register for.</li>
</ul>



<p class="has-neve-link-hover-color-background-color has-background" style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)"><strong>Our running example:</strong> We are naming this Event <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Registration Event.&#8221;</em> When we create it, we will enter &#8220;bitchin-broadcast-2026&#8221; for our <em>Custom URL</em>, select &#8220;Present an Adobe Connect Seminar&#8221; as our <em>Presentation</em> type, and select &#8220;My Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Seminar&#8221; we created in Step 1 as our<em> Content</em>.</p>



<p>Publish the Event when you are done. You will come back to finalize registration settings and email templates before you start advertising it, but it needs to exist before Step 5 will make any sense.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="step4">Step 4: Create Your Secondary AC Event</h2>



<p>Now create a second Event that will be linked to the HTML Content object you created in Step 2. This is the &#8220;wrapper&#8221; Event — the one that will log attendance for your YouTube viewers. A few key differences from Step 3:</p>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li>We will not be sharing the registration URL for the second event.  But you will be sharing the login URL, so you should make it attractive.  On the Enter Event Information page, in the <strong>Custom URL</strong> section, we will use &#8220;bitchin-livestream-2026&#8221;</li>



<li>On the <strong>Enter Event Information</strong> page, in the <strong>Presentation</strong> section, select <strong>&#8220;On Demand.&#8221;</strong> This event is not hosting a live session — it is serving up pre-existing content (your iFrame HTML file).</li>



<li>Set the start and end dates and times to match what you used for the Main Event in Step 3.</li>



<li>When you reach the <strong>Select Content</strong> step, select the AC HTML Content object you created in Step 2 — <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast iFrame HTML.&#8221;</em></li>



<li><strong>Do not advertise this Event&#8217;s registration link.</strong> Participants will never register for this Event directly. The Registration Group you create in Step 5 will handle enrollment automatically.</li>
</ul>



<p class="has-neve-link-hover-color-background-color has-background" style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)"><strong>Our running example:</strong> We are naming this Event <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast HTML Wrapper Event.&#8221;</em>  When we create it, we will enter &#8220;bitchin-livestream-2026&#8221; for our <em>Custom URL</em>, select &#8220;On Demand&#8221; as our <em>Presentation</em> type, and select &#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast iFrame HTML&#8221; we created in Step 2 as our <em>Content</em>.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="step5">Step 5: Connect the Events Using an AC Registration Group</h2>



<p>OK. Buckle up. This is where Adobe Connect&#8217;s administrative logic gets wonderfully convoluted, and where the whole two-Event architecture either clicks into place or makes you want to close the browser and go do something relaxing instead.</p>



<p>Here is what we are accomplishing: Anyone who registers for the Main Event (<em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Registration Event&#8221;</em>) will be <strong>automatically added to a designated AC Registration Group</strong>. That same group will be pre-loaded into the Secondary Event (<em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast HTML Wrapper Event&#8221;</em>) as approved participants. The result: one registration, two event records, zero extra friction for your audience.</p>



<p>This requires two sub-tasks: first, create the AC Registration Group, then wire it into both Events.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Step 5.1 — Create the AC Registration Group</h3>



<p>You need full administrator access to do this. If you are a limited admin, now is the time to call in a favor.</p>



<ol style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li>In Adobe Connect Central, select the <strong>Admin</strong> tab.</li>



<li>Navigate to <strong>Users and Groups</strong>.</li>



<li>Click <strong>New Group</strong>.</li>



<li>Enter a name and optional description for the group. Leave membership empty for now — registrants will be added automatically.</li>



<li>Click <strong>Finish</strong>.</li>
</ol>



<p class="has-neve-link-hover-color-background-color has-background" style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)"><strong>Our running example:</strong> Name the group <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Registration Group.&#8221;</em></p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Step 5.2 — Link the Registration Group to the Main Event</h3>



<p>Now tell the Main Event to automatically add approved registrants to the group you just created.</p>



<ol style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li>In Adobe Connect Central, click the <strong>Event Management</strong> tab.</li>



<li>Navigate to and select the Main Event — <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Registration Event.&#8221;</em></li>



<li>Click <strong>Participant Management</strong> in the navigation bar.</li>



<li>Click <strong>Registration Groups</strong>.</li>



<li>In the <strong>Possible Groups</strong> list, find and select <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Registration Group.&#8221;</em></li>



<li>Click <strong>Add</strong>. The group name moves to the <strong>Current Group Membership</strong> list.</li>



<li>Click <strong>Save</strong>.</li>
</ol>



<p class="has-neve-link-hover-color-background-color has-background" style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)">Our running example: Edit the &#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Registration Event&#8221; created in Step 3 as described in the 7 steps just above.</p>



<p>From this point forward, every participant who registers and is approved for the Main Event will be automatically added to <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Registration Group.&#8221;</em></p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Step 5.3 — Add the Registration Group to the Secondary Event</h3>



<p>Now wire that same group into the Secondary Event as pre-approved participants.</p>



<ol style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li>In Adobe Connect Central, click the <strong>Event Management</strong> tab.</li>



<li>Navigate to and select the Secondary Event — <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast HTML Wrapper Event.&#8221;</em></li>



<li>Click <strong>Participant Management</strong> in the navigation bar.</li>



<li>Click <strong>Add User/Group</strong>.</li>



<li>In the <strong>Available Users and Groups</strong> list, search for and select <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Registration Group.&#8221;</em></li>



<li>Click <strong>Add</strong>.</li>



<li>Set the permission for the group to <strong>Participant</strong>.</li>



<li>Click <strong>Save</strong>.</li>
</ol>



<p class="has-neve-link-hover-color-background-color has-background" style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)">Our running example: Edit the &#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast HTML Wrapper Event&#8221; created in Step 4 as described in the 8 steps just above.</p>



<p>The two Events are now connected. Anyone who registers for the Main Event is automatically an approved Participant in the Secondary Event — no second registration, no manual management, no explaining two different registration links to confused attendees.</p>



<p style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">A Word of Warning</span>:</strong> Adobe Connect adds registrants to the Registration Group when they are <em>approved</em>, not when they merely register. If your Main Event requires manual approval, you will need to stay on top of approvals before broadcast day or your YouTube viewers will show up to find they cannot access the Wrapper Event.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="step6">Step 6: Advertise the Main AC Event Registration Link</h2>



<p>At this point, you can finish building out all the registration settings, email templates, and branded event pages for the Main Event and start promoting the registration link to your audience.</p>



<p>A few important reminders:</p>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Share <span style="text-decoration: underline;">only</span> the Main Event registration link</strong> — In our example, that would be something like <em>https://your.adobeconnect.com/bitchin-broadcast-2026/event/registration.html</em>.  Do NOT share the Secondary Event link. Ever. The Registration Group handles enrollment in the Secondary Event automatically. Sharing the Secondary Event link publicly will produce confusion, double registrations, and the kind of support emails nobody wants to answer.</li>



<li>Your audience does not need to know the Secondary Event exists. As far as they are concerned, they registered for one event and will receive one set of communications.</li>
</ul>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="step7">Step 7: Create Your YT Livestream and Link It to the AC HTML Content</h2>



<p>Ideally, your organization has a dedicated team or person who will handle the OBS capture and YouTube Livestream setup while you focus on running the AC Seminar. If that is not the case — if you are the one person doing all of this — the details of configuring a full OBS-to-YouTube workflow are beyond the scope of this guide. But here is a quick orientation and pointers to go deeper.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">What is YouTube Livestream?</h3>



<p>YouTube Livestream is YouTube&#8217;s built-in broadcasting feature, available to any verified YouTube account. It lets you stream live video to a public (or unlisted) YouTube URL using an encoder — in this case, OBS (see next paragraph). Viewers watch in a standard YouTube player, no registration required, from any device with a browser. The stream is automatically archived as a YouTube video when you end it. For our purposes, the key output from YouTube Livestream setup is a unique <strong>video ID</strong> embedded in the stream&#8217;s URL — the string of characters you will drop into the HTML file from Step 2.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">What is OBS?</h3>



<p><a href="https://obsproject.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Open Broadcaster Software (OBS)</a> is a free, open-source application that captures video and audio from one or more sources — in this case, your Adobe Connect Seminar room running in a browser window — and streams it to an external platform like YouTube. It is the bridge between what is happening in your AC Seminar and what appears on the YouTube Livestream. OBS runs on a dedicated PC, captures the AC broadcast as a Window Source, mixes in audio, and pushes the signal to YouTube using a Stream Key and RTMP (Real-Time Messaging Protocol) URL provided by YouTube Studio.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">How they work together</h3>



<p>The flow looks like this: Your presenters are live in the AC Seminar. A dedicated OBS machine captures the Seminar room as a window source and streams it — in real time — to YouTube via RTMP. Meanwhile, your registered AC attendees are watching through the AC Seminar room directly, and your YouTube audience is watching the same content through the embedded iFrame in the Secondary Event. Both audiences are watching the same broadcast. One group is tracked in AC natively; the other is tracked through the HTML Wrapper Event you built in Step 4.</p>



<p>For a thorough walkthrough of the OBS-to-YouTube-to-Adobe-Connect workflow, <a href="https://howlround.com/how-produce-livestream-event-part-2" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">this HowlRound guide</a> describes the exact approach — capturing an Adobe Connect session as an OBS Window Source and broadcasting to external platforms — in practical detail. YouTube&#8217;s own <a href="https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/2907883?hl=en" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">encoder-based streaming guide</a> covers the YouTube Studio setup, stream key configuration, and going live.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Update the HTML Content Object with your Livestream ID</h3>



<p>Whether someone else sets up the YouTube Livestream for you or you do it yourself, the stream will have a unique YouTube video identifier — a short string of characters that appears in the stream URL. You need to update the HTML file from Step 2.1 with that identifier.</p>



<p>Find this portion of the HTML code:</p>



<pre class="wp-block-preformatted">src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/XbcJGxHHozk?autoplay=1"</pre>



<p>Replace <code>XbcJGxHHozk</code> with your actual YouTube Livestream video ID. The rest of the URL stays exactly as-is — including the <code>?autoplay=1</code> parameter.</p>



<p>Save the updated HTML file and <strong>upload it to AC Content to overwrite the existing &#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast iFrame HTML&#8221; object.</strong> Confirm the overwrite when prompted. The Secondary Event will now serve the updated iFrame pointing to your real Livestream.</p>



<p style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)"><strong>IMPORTANT Timing Note:</strong> YouTube does not generate the final stream URL until you actually create the Livestream in YouTube Studio. You can set up the stream in advance and schedule it, which is the recommended approach — it gives you a stable URL to work with before broadcast day. Do not leave this to the morning of the event.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="step8">Step 8: Broadcast Day — Final Pre-Checks, Log-In Links, and Attendance Reports</h2>



<p>Broadcast day is not the time to discover something is broken. Here is what to verify and communicate before you go live.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">8.1 &#8211; Pre-Broadcast Checks</h3>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Test the iFrame HTML Content object.</strong> Log in to the Secondary Event as a test participant and confirm the YouTube embed loads and autoplays correctly. Do this after the YouTube Livestream is created but before the actual broadcast.</li>



<li><strong>Confirm Registration Group population.</strong> Check that registered participants from the Main Event are appearing as approved Participants in the Secondary Event. If approvals have been sitting unreviewed, handle them now.</li>



<li><strong>Coordinate with your OBS operator.</strong> Confirm they have the YouTube Stream Key loaded, have done a test stream, and know when to start broadcasting.</li>



<li><strong>Run a dry-run of the AC Seminar room.</strong> Confirm layouts, presenter permissions, and audio/video are working before participants arrive.</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">8.2 &#8211; Broadcast Day: The Two Log-In Links</h3>



<p>On broadcast day, registered participants need two things:</p>



<ol style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li style="padding-right:0;padding-left:0">The <strong>direct log-in link to the Main Event</strong> (the AC Seminar) — for those joining through Adobe Connect directly.  In our example, that link will look something like <em>https://your.adobeconnect.com/bitchin-broadcast-2026/event/registration.html</em>. </li>



<li style="padding-right:0;padding-left:0">The <strong>direct log-in link to the Secondary Event</strong> (the YouTube iFrame wrapper) — for those who will be watching via YouTube but whose attendance you want tracked in AC. In our example, that link will look something like <em>https://your.adobeconnect.com/bitchin-livestream-2026/event/registration.html</em>. </li>
</ol>



<p>Both links should go out to all registered participants. Let them choose. Some will prefer the richer AC experience; others will watch on YouTube. Both audiences are tracked.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">8.3 &#8211; Post-Event: Attendance Reports</h3>



<p>To get a full attendance report, you need to pull the attendance data from both Events and combine it into a single clean record.  Here&#8217;s how:</p>



<p><strong>Download the attendance spreadsheets</strong></p>



<ol style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li>In Adobe Connect Central, click the <strong>Event Management</strong> tab.</li>



<li>Navigate to and select the <strong>Main Event</strong> — <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast Registration Event.&#8221;</em></li>



<li>Click <strong>Reports</strong> in the navigation bar.</li>



<li>Select <strong>Participant Report</strong> (or <strong>Attendance Report</strong>, depending on your AC version).</li>



<li>Click <strong>Download</strong> to export the report as a CSV.</li>



<li>Repeat steps 1–5 for the <strong>Secondary Event</strong> — <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast HTML Wrapper Event.&#8221;</em></li>
</ol>



<p>You now have two spreadsheets: one for your AC Seminar attendees, one for your YouTube/iFrame attendees.</p>



<p><strong>Combine and deduplicate</strong></p>



<p>Open both files in Excel (or your spreadsheet tool of choice). Copy all rows from the Secondary Event report and paste them below the rows from the Main Event report in a single sheet. You will have duplicate entries for any participant who logged into both Events — this can happen if a registrant toggled between the AC Seminar and the YouTube wrapper during the broadcast.</p>



<p>To remove duplicates in Excel: select the combined data, go to <strong>Data → Remove Duplicates</strong>, and deduplicate on the participant email address column. That gives you your final headcount — each registered attendee counted once, regardless of which room they watched from.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">8.4 — Multi-Day Events</h3>



<p>If your broadcast runs over multiple days, there are two things you need to know before you start rolling dates forward.</p>



<p><strong>Download before you roll.</strong></p>



<p>This is the one that will ruin your week if you skip it. After each day&#8217;s broadcast, download the attendance reports for both Events <em>before</em> you change the Event dates for the next day. Adobe Connect&#8217;s reporting is tied to the Event&#8217;s configured date range — once you roll the dates forward, the previous day&#8217;s attendance data becomes inaccessible. It is gone. Download first, roll dates second. Every time, without exception.</p>



<p>Once you have the daily spreadsheets, you can combine them using the same deduplication process described in 8.3 above — either per day (for daily attendance counts) or across all days (for overall unique attendance).</p>



<p><strong>Create a new HTML file and Content object for each day.</strong></p>



<p>YouTube Studio generates a unique video ID for each Livestream you create — Day 1 and Day 2 are separate streams with separate IDs. That means you cannot reuse the same HTML iFrame file across days. For each day of a multi-day broadcast, you need to:</p>



<ol style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li>Create a new Livestream in YouTube Studio for that day&#8217;s session. Note the new video ID from the stream URL.</li>



<li>Create a new HTML file using the same code from Step 2.1, with the new video ID substituted in place of the placeholder.</li>



<li>Upload the new HTML file to AC Content as a <em>new</em> Content object — do not overwrite the previous day&#8217;s file. Name it clearly (e.g., <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast iFrame HTML — Day 2&#8221;</em>).</li>



<li>In Adobe Connect Central, navigate to the <strong>Secondary Event</strong> — <em>&#8220;Bitchin&#8217; Broadcast HTML Wrapper Event&#8221;</em> — and update its <strong>Select Content</strong> setting to point to the new Day 2 Content object.</li>
</ol>



<p>Do this before each day&#8217;s broadcast. The Secondary Event itself stays the same — you are only swapping out which HTML Content object it serves.</p>



<p>(Yes, this is a lot of steps for what should be a trivially simple thing. Adobe Connect was not exactly designed with multi-day livestream workflows in mind. Welcome to the club.)</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading has-text-align-center" style="padding-top:var(--wp--preset--spacing--60)"><em>And that&#8217;s that.  If you have any questions or suggestions, please put them in the comments below!</em></h3>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="references">References and Resources</h2>



<p>The following resources were used in building this guide and are worth bookmarking for deeper learning:</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Adobe Connect — Events</h3>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li><a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/adobe-connect/using/connect-events.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">About Adobe Connect Events</a> — Overview, roles, and event lifecycle</li>



<li><a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/adobe-connect/using/creating-editing-events.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Create and Edit Adobe Connect Events</a> — Event wizard, Registration Groups, participant management</li>



<li><a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/adobe-connect/using/events.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Manage Adobe Connect Events</a> — Reporting, engagement tracking, analytics</li>



<li><a href="https://blogs.adobe.com/connectsupport/how-what-is-needed-to-create-new-events/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">How &amp; What Is Needed to Create New Events</a> — Adobe Connect Blog walkthrough covering Registration Groups and event wrapping</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">Adobe Connect — Seminars and Administration</h3>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li><a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/adobe-connect/using/creating-seminars.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Working with Adobe Connect Seminars</a> — Seminar room setup, sessions, and licensing</li>



<li><a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/in/adobe-connect/connect-central-admin/connect-central-group-basics.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Connect Central: Group Basics</a> — Creating and managing custom groups</li>



<li><a href="https://helpx.adobe.com/adobe-connect/using/broadcast-controls-green-room.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Broadcast Controls / Green Room</a> — Managing the broadcast lifecycle in a Seminar room</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">YouTube Livestreaming</h3>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li><a href="https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/2907883?hl=en" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Create a YouTube Live Stream with an Encoder</a> — Official YouTube guide: stream key, RTMP, Live Control Room</li>



<li><a href="https://studio.youtube.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">YouTube Studio</a> — Where you set up and manage your Livestream</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">OBS Studio</h3>



<ul style="padding-right:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70);padding-left:var(--wp--preset--spacing--70)" class="wp-block-list">
<li><a href="https://obsproject.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">OBS Studio</a> — Free, open-source broadcast software. Download and documentation.</li>



<li><a href="https://howlround.com/how-produce-livestream-event-part-2" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">How to Produce a Livestream Event, Part 2</a> — HowlRound; the most directly applicable guide for capturing Adobe Connect in OBS and streaming to external platforms</li>
</ul><p>The post <a href="https://sevenelles.com/expand-your-adobe-connect-audience-with-a-youtube-livestream/">Expand Your Adobe Connect Audience with a YouTube Livestream</a> first appeared on <a href="https://sevenelles.com">Sevenelles</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
					
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