
What are the best days and times to hold your event?
Sponsorships are a great way to pay for your event and add extra perks to your event.
If you offer continuing education, many more participants will attend. Many professional associations require their members to attend classes. Why not tap into this profitable market?
One challenge for many event organizers is getting people to actually attend your event. In this section, Joan shares her secrets to creating demand for your event.
Having a website is crucial for marketing and attracting your attendees and building credibility.
Social Media is where most of your attendees will discover you. Joan walks you through how she uses Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Instagram to bring attendees to her events.
Eventbrite is a global platform for live experiences that allows anyone to create, share, find and attend events that fuel their passions and enrich their lives. From music festivals, marathons, conferences, community rallies, and fundraisers, to gaming competitions and air guitar contests. Their mission is to bring the world together through live experiences.
Joan shares how she leverages the worldwide reach of Eventbrite to fill her seminars and workshops.
Your network is very important to growing your business and filling the room. Joan goes over a few ways she uses her network to sell out events.
You can not do a successful event alone. You need people working together to create a successful workshop or seminar.
In this section, Joan talks about how to set up your conference's location for maximum benefit and the enjoyment of your attendees.
Joan talks about important considerations when deciding upon where you will be holding your event.
Joan shares some ways you can make your event less expensive or perhaps even free!
It is very important that you make sure everything you want is in the contract with the hotel and event venue. Often event leaders show up and discover that a lot of things they thought would be there were not included.
What food and drinks should you include in your events?
Audio and visual equipment is important and in this lecture, Joan shares her experiences with equipment.
Add PDF Checklist
Joan talks about the excitement of presenting and what to expect in this section.
PowerPoint is easier that Keynote. Joan sows you haw to make a presentation in Keynote and convert to PowerPoint.
A lot of how you come across when you are on stage is non-verbal: How you are dressed, your grooming, your posture and much more. In this lecture, Joan shares how she connects with her audience.
WIFI is very important to your presentation.
Now you are ready to start your event. A very exciting day!
How to deal with a walk-in attendee. What to do if they thought they paid but did not. Joan share how to use your iPad to take credit cards.
Volunteer staff are crucial to the success of your events. Event planners are important to organizing the event. joan shares how she sets up her helpers so it is valuable for them as well as your attendees.
Before you hold your event and as you plan, keep a checklist and add to it as you discover things you did not think about. Joan shares what is in her checklist.
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You've decided to organize a conference. It's quite a task!
At least six months before the event, you should begin planning. For larger conferences, planning may begin a year ahead. There will be many moving parts.
There are a million things you want to know. How do you begin? How do you choose the right speakers? What venue is best suited for your needs?
Don't worry.
Even though organizing a conference can be a difficult task, it is not impossible. You don't have to invent the wheel. Follow these steps.
This top-level guide will help you organize a conference. This guide will walk you through all the steps and connect you to useful tools and articles that will help you make your job easier. These steps don't necessarily follow a chronological order -- you may start to contact potential speakers before you have secured a venue. But they will give you an idea of where to focus your attention first.
Are you ready to organize that conference?
Step 1: Choose a theme
A theme is essential for any conference. What is the conference's unifying message? And what are the main takeaways for attendees?
The most effective themes are relatable and catchy. They also trigger emotions. The conference should inspire and stimulate discussion. This is what your theme should do.
For example, "Stronger together as a team" might be a better theme that "Achieving greater efficiency through cross-functional collaboration."
It is not just a rallying cry for everyone involved; it will guide you branding and promotion, from designing your logo to creating social media hashtags to printing posters, brochures and other collateral.
Additional reading and tools
A great guide from TED: Create a topic
This is a great list of ideas to help you brainstorm: 127 themes and concepts for your next corporate event
Step 2: Assemble your A-team
You won't likely be the one organizing a conference. We'd be surprised if that was the case.
To manage different aspects of promotion, negotiation, and planning, you will need a core team. The following people will be part of your core team:
Planning group: Conference venue and accommodation. Activities, catering.
Administration team - Budgeting, attendee registration and ticket sales. This person/team will be your main contact for all questions regarding the conference.
Marketing team - Contacting media, creating promotional materials, managing your website, blog and social media activities.
The Sponsorships Team is responsible for securing sponsors and applying for grants. Only relevant to conferences that depend on outside sources of funding. Obviously)
Volunteers : Helping with all activities on-site on the day. This includes ticket scanning, door management, managing the guest list, maintaining the guest list, dressing, guiding people, and so on.
Your primary job is to coordinate the team and assign tasks.
Step 3: Create a budget and a business plan
You will need to create a budget, regardless of whether your conference is sponsored. It is important to understand where your money is going.
A budget can help you determine the cost of attending the conference. These are the most important items that you should budget for:
Location
Accommodation
Transport
Catering
Speaker fees
Activities
Marketing
Members of the team
When searching for venues or negotiating contracts, it is a good idea to prepare a budget.
This course takes you step by step on how to choose a topic, locate the venue, produce, market and sell out your event. The instructor has 25 years’ experience in the creation, marketing and production of conferences and events. Putting on an event takes meticulous planning. This course provides a checklist from beginning to completion taking your profits to the bank.
What is your passion?
What do you love to teach others?
Hundreds if not thousands of people want to learn from you. Are you a dynamic speaker? Do you like telling stories? What are you an expert in that other people seek your advice?
If you are a therapist or life coach teaching is another way to expand your business. But all businesses have people in them who do product demos, seminars and more.
If you are one of them then this course is for you!
Register today!