Virtual Scopus conferences have changed the game for researchers everywhere. If travel budgets are tight, visa restrictions are complicated, or you simply can't leave your lab for a week, you can still publish in Scopus-indexed proceedings without boarding a plane.
Virtual conferences offer some genuine advantages that even well-funded researchers appreciate:
Environmental impact: Fewer flights means a smaller carbon footprint for academia
We should be clear — virtual conferences aren't a lesser option. They're a different format that delivers the same publication outcome.
Not all virtual Scopus conferences work the same way. Here are the main formats we've encountered:
Everything happens live online. You join scheduled sessions via Zoom, Teams, or a custom platform, present your talk in real time, and participate in live Q&A. This format most closely mirrors an in-person event.
You pre-record your presentation and upload it to the conference platform. Attendees watch at their convenience and leave questions in a discussion forum. The live Q&A may happen separately.
Some attendees are physically present while others join remotely. You can choose which mode suits you. This is increasingly the default format for major Scopus conferences.
Some conferences offer a virtual poster track alongside an in-person oral programme. This is often the most affordable entry point.
Presenting online is a different skill from presenting in person. Here's how to do it well:
This is one of the most common concerns we hear. The short answer: yes.
From a Scopus indexing perspective, there's absolutely no difference. Your paper appears in the same proceedings volume, with the same indexing, whether you presented in person or online.
From a career perspective, hiring committees and promotion panels look at your publication record — they're checking whether your paper is Scopus-indexed, not whether you flew to the conference. We've never seen a CV that distinguishes between virtual and in-person presentations, and frankly, no one's asking.
The only area where virtual attendance may fall short is networking. It's harder to build deep personal connections online. We recommend supplementing virtual conferences with active engagement on LinkedIn, ResearchGate, and email follow-ups to bridge the gap.
Virtual Scopus conferences have removed one of the biggest barriers in academic publishing — geography. Whether you're in a small town with no nearby airports or in a bustling city with an overloaded schedule, you can now publish in respected Scopus proceedings from wherever you are.
We encourage you to explore Scopus conferences on AIScholar, submit your best work, and present it with confidence. The world is your conference venue now.