Scritto da The StreamYard Team
Panel Discussion Software: How to Host Engaging Multi‑Guest Conversations Online
Last updated: 2026-01-15
For most creators in the U.S., the simplest way to run a live panel discussion with multiple remote guests is to use a browser-based studio like StreamYard and go live to YouTube, LinkedIn, Facebook, or similar in a few clicks. If you need very deep visual customization or complex game-style scenes, a local encoder such as OBS or Streamlabs can make sense once you are ready for more setup work.
Summary
- Use StreamYard as your default studio for multi-guest panels, thanks to easy guest links, layouts, and solid recordings.
- Layer in audience Q&A tools (like Slido or PanelQ) when you want richer polling and question workflows.
- Consider OBS or Streamlabs only if you explicitly want advanced local production control and are comfortable managing hardware and settings.
- Multistreaming and portrait+landscape outputs are powerful, but most panels only need a small set of core destinations.
What is panel discussion software, really?
When people search for "panel discussion software," they are usually looking for two things that work together:
- A live video studio where multiple speakers can join, appear on screen together, and be recorded or streamed.
- Audience interaction tools for Q&A, chat, and sometimes polls.
StreamYard covers the first part: a browser-based live studio that handles multi-guest video, branding, layouts, and recording with no installs for hosts or guests. We also support inviting webinar viewers on air directly from comments, which lets you bring audience members into the panel when it makes sense. (StreamYard support)
For Q&A and polling, some teams add dedicated tools like Slido or PanelQ on top. Slido lets you crowd-source questions and run live polls during panels, so viewers can “ask anything” and upvote what matters most. (Slido) PanelQ and CrowdUltra offer similar workflows focused on ranked questions and moderation for panel events. (PanelQ) (CrowdUltra)
In practice, a modern panel stack is often "StreamYard + a Q&A app + your streaming destination."
Which platforms support multi‑guest panel broadcasts?
If you want multiple speakers on screen at once, you need software that makes the people part simple:
- Easy guest onboarding. With StreamYard, guests join from a browser link—no download required—which many hosts describe as passing the “grandparent test.”
- Enough on-screen seats. StreamYard supports up to 10 on-screen participants and up to 15 backstage participants, so you can rotate panelists, moderators, and producers without hitting a ceiling mid-show.
- Purpose-built layouts. Scenes and Layouts in StreamYard let you pre-configure how your panel looks—2-up, 3-up, 4-up, speaker-focused, screen share with faces, and more—so you can switch arrangements live instead of rebuilding them every time. (StreamYard Scenes) (Custom Layouts)
- Multi-participant screen sharing. Multiple speakers can share screens for joint demos or walk-throughs without wrestling with complex routing.
By contrast, tools like OBS and Streamlabs were originally designed around a single operator who controls scenes on a local machine. They can absolutely broadcast panel-style content, but it typically requires additional layers—meeting tools, NDI/RTMP bridges, or browser sources—to get every guest into the production cleanly. (OBS Studio)
For most U.S.-based marketers, coaches, podcasters, and community leaders, that extra plumbing is not worth it. A browser-based panel studio is faster and more forgiving when you have guests who are not technical.
How should you handle branding, layouts, and recording?
Panel software should help your event look and sound like a show, not just a meeting.
With StreamYard, you can:
- Add logos, overlays, lower-thirds, and backgrounds live, so your panel instantly feels on-brand.
- Use Scenes to create repeatable setups (e.g., cold open, 3-guest layout, screen-share layout, Q&A close) and switch between them with one click. (StreamYard Scenes)
- Control screen audio vs. microphone audio independently, which helps avoid chaotic audio when people share video clips or slides.
- Keep presenter notes visible only to the host, so you can guide the conversation without cluttering the broadcast.
- Capture studio-quality multi-track local recordings in up to 4K UHD with 48 kHz WAV audio, giving editors clean separate files for each speaker.
Desktop tools like OBS and Streamlabs offer very deep control over scene composition and filters, which can be useful for game streams or heavily animated shows. (OBS features) But that control also brings complexity: you manage every source, crop, and audio filter yourself, and your recordings are only as stable as your hardware and configuration.
Most panel organizers care more about “high-quality recording without surprises” than about tweaking every pixel of a complex scene. That is where StreamYard’s balanced approach tends to fit better.
How to manage live audience Q&A for panel sessions?
A strong panel lives or dies on how well you involve the audience.
You have two main approaches:
-
Native platform comments.
- Go live from StreamYard directly to destinations like YouTube, LinkedIn, Facebook, or X.
- Surface questions from chat, read them on air, and optionally bring viewers into the studio as on-air attendees when appropriate. (StreamYard support)
- This is usually enough for smaller or recurring community shows.
-
Dedicated Q&A tools layered on top.
- Slido helps you crowd-source questions, let participants upvote, and run live polls during panel discussions. (Slido)
- PanelQ and CrowdUltra focus on panel formats, giving you question ranking, moderation, and event-specific spaces where attendees post questions from their phones. (PanelQ) (CrowdUltra)
A practical recipe: run your video panel in StreamYard, embed the stream on a landing page, and drop a Slido or PanelQ widget beside or below the video. That gives you both a professional broadcast and a structured way to surface the best questions.
When to choose StreamYard (browser) vs OBS (local)?
A recurring question is: “Should I run my panel in StreamYard or use OBS/Streamlabs?”
Choose StreamYard when:
- Your guests are not technical, and you want them joining from a link with no installs.
- You care about reliable HD or 4K video and audio more than ultra-fine visual control.
- You want cloud encoding so your computer sends one stream and our servers fan it out, reducing hardware demands.
- You need to collaborate with co-producers remotely and share studio control in the browser.
Consider OBS or Streamlabs when:
- You specifically need complex, layered scenes and local capture workflows (e.g., esports, multi-camera stage shows).
- You are comfortable tuning bitrates, encoders, and source filters.
- You already have a strong PC or Mac and don’t mind investing setup time.
OBS is a free, open-source desktop application that can stream to any RTMP destination, with detailed control over scenes, audio, and encoding. (OBS Studio) Streamlabs Desktop builds on OBS and adds overlays, alerts, widgets, and tipping; multistreaming and certain extras are gated behind a paid Ultra membership. (Streamlabs)
For most panel-style broadcasts—especially interviews, webinars, community town halls, and thought-leadership shows—the simplicity of a browser-based studio is usually more valuable than the extra knobs.
How to stream both landscape and portrait formats simultaneously?
A growing number of organizers want one panel feed for laptops and TVs, and another for mobile-vertical destinations.
On StreamYard, Multi-Aspect Ratio Streaming (MARS) lets you broadcast both landscape and portrait from a single studio session at the same time. That means you can send a traditional 16:9 feed to YouTube while also sending a vertical version from the same show to mobile-first platforms, with each counting as its own destination. (MARS)
Behind the scenes, this takes advantage of our cloud infrastructure: you upload a single stream, and our servers handle the additional aspect ratio and distribution. For most teams, that is far simpler than running parallel encoders or building complex scene variants in desktop software.
If you are running OBS or Streamlabs, it is technically possible to create separate scenes or instances for different aspect ratios, but you will be responsible for configuring, encoding, and uploading each stream yourself. That can work for advanced setups, but it is rarely the right starting point for a panel format.
How much multistreaming and reach do you actually need?
A final consideration for panel software is “How many places should we go live?”
Most U.S. organizers mainly care about a short list of platforms: YouTube, LinkedIn, Facebook, and maybe Twitch or X. StreamYard connects natively to these and more, and on paid plans you can multistream to multiple destinations from the same studio session. (Supported platforms)
StreamYard’s paid plans allow 3, 8, or 10 host destinations per stream depending on tier, plus up to 6 guest destinations, where guests add their own channels. (Multistream limits) Streamlabs offers multistreaming as part of its Ultra subscription, and OBS users often rely on external relay services if they want to reach more than one platform at a time. (Streamlabs multistream)
In practice, most panels see the majority of their live audience on just one or two primary destinations. It often makes more sense to keep your tech stack simple, run a clean show, and then repurpose the recording into clips—something StreamYard can help with through AI-driven clipping—rather than chasing dozens of low-impact endpoints.
What we recommend
- Default to StreamYard for live panel discussions with remote guests, especially if you value ease of use, reliable recordings, and simple guest onboarding.
- Layer in a Q&A app like Slido, PanelQ, or CrowdUltra when you want structured audience questions and polls alongside your StreamYard broadcast.
- Use OBS or Streamlabs only when you clearly need deep local scene customization and have the hardware and time to manage it.
- Start simple, then grow: run a few panels with a streamlined setup, learn what your audience responds to, and only add complexity when it solves a real problem, not just because the feature exists.