Are your events badass? Are they unforgettable experiences delivering ROI, creative brand awareness and community cultivation? Karen Hartline, CEO of Reinventing Events will share her top 50 tips she has gained over the past 13 years of event production experience covering pre-planning, speakers, onsite, sponsors, food & beverage, post-production, and even some insider tips. The tips will help planners design events where the clients’ brands and personalities shine through the entire production, as well give the attendees a one-of-a-kind event experience.
#50Tips to Hosting Badass Events by Karen Hartline, Reinventing Events #INBOUND15
1. INBOUND15
Behind the Curtain —
50 Tips for
Hosting Badass Events
Karen Hartline
CEO, Reinventing Events
#50tips @khartline
2. --13 years of event production experience
--Orchestrate events in U.S. and U.K.
--Produce variety of events including: conferences, dinners,
launch parties and road shows
--Accommodate budgets of all sizes
Karen Hartline |
@khartline
--Former life I was the director of events at Mashable, worked at Porter Novelli PR agency, Blurb, Intervarsity, before starting my own company
--I’ll hang out after to take questions!
--I’ll email the presentation out if you leave your business card
--I hope you learn at least 1 new thing. If you don’t, I’ll buy you a drink!
Let’s start at the beginning---
End result—work backwards!
What will make the event a complete failure? Avoid that
Not just last minute things, but also things like CC fees or printing
Contingency!
Facebook event page
Private social network
Mobile app
2011—started with speed networking and a bar
People sat together at dinner and for the next few days
Build the ticket fees INTO the ticket cost so it’s not an additional line item.
Better attendee experience to pay one price, not a price PLUS fees
Use custom questions to define topics for speakers
Gauge attendee expectation
Upcoming client, we’re asking the question “What are you excited about at the event” and we’re using those responses for marketing as well as integrating into the design of the event—quotes throughout
Hit the road!
Instead of hosting 1 BIG event and expecting everyone to come to you, do smaller events and go to them
May not be less expensive than a big show
Great opportunity for local communities to meet Mashable
Also brought the local communities together. Austin told us our event was the first to bring all of the tech/social communities together.
Twilio made a big partnership announcement with Google. The idea of the tour was to show how people can use cloud-based services to run customer service for their company.
Each participant got a Google Chromebook.
We reused the stage setup in each city.
Road shows can be FUN!
Book tour/karaoke road show—team of 6—5 on the road, and one as ground control!
locally organized within the communities
13 cities in 2.5 weeks
There were actually people who came out in each city to rock with us!
Client wanted to do a summer event with a “Camp” theme, but wasn’t sure about timing as families vacation. We found a location that ran a kids program and fit with the camp theme and suggested making it a family vacation trip instead.
local attendee—cowork at the conference
Wooden name badges
Attendee quotes throughout the venue
Recreated the client’s kitchen at their event—picnic tables, snack containers with M&Ms, goldfish, and a grab-and-go beverage fridge.
Cuts down on missed items from event to event
Easier to jump into planning, especially with short turn around.
Master production template—plug in event date, BOOM—sets other dates automagically
CEO came to us 2 weeks before conference as he was working on keynote presentation.
Share stories—faces on banners—spotlights on each banner.
Busted ass to create the WOW moment.
Customers didn’t know their faces were on the banners.
WOW factor at TwilioCon 2012
Event specific twitter profiles go dark after the event and can lose followers due to inactivity.
If you’re going to create profile—have a year-long strategy in place for it.
Otherwise, hashtag it up.
Speakers can make or break your event
Attendees want to meet speakers.
Set the expectation from the beginning—ask them to attend the event and SPEAK at a specific time.
Attendees want to ask questions!
Startup competition—18 judges
Schedule had 90 open minutes.
Pitched an idea that I’d wanted to do for a long time.
Invited all judges to be on an ‘ask the expert’ panel. 13 said yes
90 minutes of Q&A conversation—
Broke down the barrier of speaker/audience member—more of a conversation
Judges asked each other questions
Jermaine Dupri joined us too
Don’t’ allow anyone on stage without knowing what they’ll be sharing
20min calls with speakers—first 10 w/ client, last 10 with my team for logistics
Speakers thank us all the time for this!
Think of a few questions to ask your speakers to use to create content for promo purposes.
Also gets attendees to know the speakers better and tease about what they might talk about
Panels don’t usually chat until backstage
Organize and make sure they’re on same page
Ask entire group what topics they would like to discuss
Share what you’d like them to cover
Wish list—divide into tiers
Set a deadline for response
Turned down or no response—ask next on list!
WHY do you want them to speak?
Suggest a topic
Let guests mingle and meet others
Easier for come and go vs. someone not coming at all because they can’t commit to dinner
Invite speakers, top-level sponsors, people from your company, community supporters, future speakers, past speakers
Make a first impression!
We had employees stand outside and give high 5’s to attendees coming in
We have a standard playlist we suggest to clients
Or collect song suggestions from employees and make a playlist.
Easy to do with online music services
Connected to wifi—can disconnect or worse—BUFFER!
This is YOUR event.
Event staff are first point of contact for attendees.
Why not have your company as those first touches?
Strategize for the event
Give them list of attendees/companies in advance—meetings
Plan for space for them to have meetings—rooms or café tables
Don’t let the sales team walk into the event without a plan. Make their plan part of YOUR plan.
The more they know about the event, the easier it is for them to sell before the event too.
New Relic—developers
Badges were mini computers—wifi and NFC—tap badge, trade contact info, vote on sessions
Wired even covered the geeky badges
Mashable Connect at Walt Disney World-milk/cookies/ears room drop
Give your attendees a better reason to stay a while—
From producer standpoint, backpacks mean 1 person takes up space for 2
Wouldn’t it be nice to have a 5-min chair massage to relieve some stress?
How about holding a puppy or kitten?
We worked with Collision on their Vegas event and their sponsor Wemo had a setup where you could ‘play’ with the puppies via their hardware switches.
The puppies were up for adoption and all went to new homes!
Went to an event this summer, YxYY, where someone hosted a Kitten Café. I’m allergic and I held a kitten…
We suggest planning on 2.5-3 devices per person
Wifi is pricey—budget high
Don’t depend on ‘free wifi’. It will bog down.
If speakers need wifi, definitely go with hard wires at the stage if you can afford it.
Charging stations…standalone, tables, in furniture, as giveaways
Great sponsorship opportunity…which leads us into SPONSORS
Pet peeve
Sponsors want contacts, yes—but be strategic
What are their goals? Who do they want to meet?
Share list of companies/titles—no names/contact info. Let them pick specific people you’ll send an email to on their behalf before the event.
Send special invite to join a table for lunch for a conversation.
Be a connector for sponsors.
Think about fun things that sponsors can do to engage with attendees
CMX Summit—an event for community professionals—had a sponsor who wanted to do something fun.
Yearbook photo booth—props, created Yearbook—mailed to attendees
Sponsors want stage time.
Highly suggest not offering sponsors presentation time.
Introduce speakers—they get to schmooze with speaker backstage,
2 min to introduce themselves & why they’re at the event (sales pitch for you!), then intro speaker
Scripted and approved!
Give sponsors option to include APPROVED item in swag bag
Give suggestions for cool swag on price point.
Attendees want to meet like-minded people and talk shop.
List table topics or interests so people can sit together and chat.
Can be business related ( B2B, B2C) or fun (I binge on Netflix)
Very important to offer multiple food options to ensure everyone is comfortable and well-fed throughout the event.
As of 2012, ADA covers food related allergies and gluten related diseases
Vegetarian—normal
Vegan, glutton free, kosher,
Ask for food restrictions on registration or list contact to send requests to on FAQ page
Also LABEL FOOD accordingly
Stay away from nuts in food, if possible
Default is boxed lunch, but a goal of the event was to have a community feel.
We deconstructed the box lunch and put items into boxes—for 6 people.
Grab a box and grab some people—eat away!
For another client who had a fall event—we hosted a make your won Potato Bar with chili—could do soup and/or potato
Water is much better than soda—and less expensive!
No sugar crash
Add cucumber, strawberry, mint, lemon, to make it fancy
Fruit, yogurt parfaits, crudité, trail mix, granola bars, smoothies, greenies, popcorn
Try to avoid sugary snacks so you don’t have attendees sugar crash!
Schedule time during the event—add a meeting request to your calendar, set an alarm, add it to production schedule
Take shifts so the entire team not only eats, but can take a break
Don’t get HANGRY
Plan meals for your vendors too—they greatly appreciate it!
We hold meals for clients as well in case they don’t get to eat.
People think the event is over when the last attendee leaves the venue, but there’s still work to do!
Cards and Gifts for speakers
Cards for venue/vendors—goes a long way when you have another event to do with them.
Trust me—once the event is over, you’re going to want to sleep for 3 days, but there’s work to do!
Have your survey ready to go!
Have posts drafted for after the event—as much as you can.
Make a plan for uploading content—videos, photos, etc.
We ask photographers for 1-3 day turnaround (depending on when event is)
Videos within a week—roll them out to get most important/keynotes first!
Take notes during the event on venue, vendors, speakers, registration, flow—everything
What worked, what didn’t work
Review notes as you’re planning the next event
If you know you’re doing the next event, plan ahead to secure venue/date so you can announce.
If you don’t have venue/date, sell super early tickets with a full refund policy to get people onboard early.
What are those things you tend to need onsite?
Snack bars, breath mints, safety pins, zip ties, pain meds, clipboards and energy strips
Ours now includes a bullhorn as we had a fire alarm go off at a 1,000 person event and needed to address the crowd outside.
Event planning listed as one of top 5 most stressful jobs by Careercast
Have a plan for stressful times—we use “Starbucks run” to let others know we’re at our limit and need a break or we can send someone on a Starbucks run if we think they need to take a break.
No arguing or questioning—everyone covers needs.
This is our secret weapon—the only way we keep all details straight.
Boomerang emails back if no response
Schedule to send at a later time in Gmail…I don’t allow my team to reply to emails after hours or on weekends because I truly believe in (NEXT SLIDE)
Go offline and take care of themselves.
We have to in order to be ready for the stressful work we do.
We set the expectation that we’ll reply within 24 business hours—relieves stress of replying to emails at night or on weekends
This next slide is the point that really drives everything we do at Reinventing Events…
Attendee is spending money AND time.
What do they want to walk away with?
If anyone didn’t learn at least 1 new thing, let me know…drink’s on me!