Teleprompter for Live Events: What Actually Works on Stage

Recording a video and prompting at a live event are completely different problems. On video, you get retakes. On stage, you get one shot. Here is what to know about using a teleprompter for live events — conferences, corporate shows, product launches, award ceremonies — and which tools and setups hold up when the pressure is real.

Why live events need a different kind of teleprompter

Most teleprompter apps are built for video creators. They scroll text at a constant speed while you read to a camera. That works fine when you can stop and restart. Live events break every assumption those tools are built on.

At a conference or corporate event, the host does not read continuously. They deliver a line, wait for applause, introduce a speaker, pause for a transition, read a sponsor mention, then jump to the next segment. The timing is unpredictable. A constant-scroll teleprompter either races ahead or falls behind, and both are worse than having no prompter at all.

There are other complications too. Multiple speakers share the stage — a host, a keynote presenter, an announcer, maybe a panel moderator. Each person needs to see their own lines clearly. Last-minute script changes are not the exception, they are the norm. Sponsors get added, speakers change their titles, the CEO rewrites the closing remarks ten minutes before doors open. And there is no backstage IT department setting up dedicated prompting rigs at most corporate events. You are working with what you brought.

Setup options for live event prompting

The right setup depends on the venue, budget, and how many speakers need prompting. Here are the most common approaches.

Tablet on the podium

The simplest option. Place a tablet (iPad or Android) flat on the podium or lectern, angled toward the speaker. It is invisible to the audience and requires zero additional gear. This works well for single-speaker presentations and keynotes where the speaker stays in one spot. The limitation is that looking down at a podium is obvious if you do it too often.

Second screen or confidence monitor

A monitor placed on the floor in front of the stage, facing the speaker. The audience cannot see it. This is standard for bigger corporate events and award shows. You can use a laptop or external monitor connected to the prompting device. The speaker looks roughly toward the audience while reading from the monitor below the sight line.

Popup teleprompter on a second display

If you are running a browser-based teleprompter, you can pop it out into a separate window and drag it to a second screen — a confidence monitor, a stage-side display, or a separate tablet. This avoids needing dedicated prompting hardware. You control the script from your device; the speaker sees clean text on theirs.

Dedicated prompting rig with beam-splitter glass

The full broadcast setup: a monitor reflects text onto angled glass in front of the speaker so they appear to look straight at the audience. This is what you see at political events and large-scale broadcasts. It works perfectly, but it costs thousands to rent and requires a trained operator. Most corporate events and conferences do not have the budget or the need.

What to look for in a live event teleprompter

The features that matter for live prompting are not the same as the ones that matter for video. Here is what actually makes a difference on stage:

Common mistakes with live event prompting

Using scroll mode for a hosted event. If the host has to pause for audience interaction, introduce speakers, or react to what is happening in the room, constant-speed scrolling is the wrong tool. Step-through mode exists for exactly this reason.

Not testing on the actual screen. Font size that looks fine on your laptop might be unreadable on a confidence monitor six meters away. Always check the text size on the actual display the speaker will be reading from, in the actual lighting conditions.

Relying on venue Wi-Fi. The Wi-Fi will be slow. It might drop entirely during the keynote. Use a teleprompter that works offline, or run everything on a local network.

One script for multiple speakers with no role markings. When the host, the CEO, and the award presenter are all reading from the same document, unmarked text becomes a mess. Color-coded roles solve this immediately.

The bottom line

A teleprompter for live events needs to handle unpredictable timing, multiple speakers, last-minute changes, and unreliable internet. Most teleprompter apps were not designed for this. They were designed for someone sitting in front of a camera, reading at a steady pace.

If you are hosting, emceeing, or managing scripts at live events, look for step-through control, multi-speaker support, and offline capability. Those three things are the difference between a prompter that helps and one that makes things harder.

Try GhostCue for your next event

Free browser teleprompter with step-through mode, RolePlay, and offline support. No download, no sign-up.

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