First Steps for Planning Your
Event
By
Dave Lake
One you have decided why you are holding
your event, and have investigated its feasibility, as an
event manager, you have to start putting a plan together.
There are many factors that have to be taken into account
when planning even the simplest event, there are staff to
arrange, venues to find, equipment to source and tickets or
invitations to send out.
First things first - all good event
managers make lists
Over the years - one of the most
effective tools I have come across when planning for an
event is a simple, handwritten list. Although these days I
use my computer to schedule my tasks, sometimes it is still
easier to collect my thoughts together with nothing more
than a sheet of blank paper and a pencil. It doesn't really
matter how you organize these thoughts, it may be
chronologically or it may be by section of the
event.
The Event Management
Framework
Once you have established the initial
plan of action, you should start to fill in the gaps and
add detail to each of the sections. At the same time you
can start to put the action points into an order of
priority - with the most important elements first, followed
by the less important ones.
This planning document will start to form
the framework which will help you through the event
planning process, and will guide you through how you are
going to run the event successfully. This plan will be with
you through the entire event planning process, the live
event and the evaluation stages.
It is important to cover as many areas as
possible in this first instance, as the more thought you
give to the event at this stage, the more successful and
stress free your event will be.
Have you managed this event
before?
Many events occur on an annual basis, or
are at least similar in some ways to events that have
happened in the past? A conference for one client will have
many similar attributes to a conference for a new
client.
Unless you really have never done an
event of this type before (in which case I seriously
suggest you find a freelance manager who has) you should be
able to look at the planning that took place and use many
of the ideas and techniques from the last
event.
Not only will this help you to save time
in the initial planning stages (as you will have a
pre-determined list of all the things you have to do) but
it will also help you to ensure you do not miss any of the
elements.
At the end of every event you should
evaluate what you did - which will allow you to learn
lessons from previous events.
These lessons should be both positive and
negative - remember for every one thing that went wrong,
ten things will have gone right - so learn from the good as
well as the bad.
Who is going to do
what?
Once you have decided which activities
have to take place, you need to decide who is going to do
them. For a small event, it may be that you manage many of
the elements on your own - but on the day of the event it
is usual for many more people to get
involved.
When planning for you event, you need to
see which skills you require, and recruit the right people
for the right tasks.
Once you have the right people in place,
you not only need to let them know what they have to do,
but when they have to do it, where they have to do it and
why they have to do it - so that they can see where their
part of the planning process fits into the overall event
planning process.
Planning is one of the most critical
elements of event management - and the management of the
planning process is even more important. Knowing that every
aspect of the event is covered will make the event run a
lot more smoothly, and be a lot less hassle for all event
management and production staff.