December 12th, 2008 in Management

15 Useful Event Promotion Tips

In a recession, the entertainment industry thrives. So if you are thinking about trying your hand at event promotion, I have some suggestions for you:

  1. You need at least two weeks to advertise. Use different color flyers with different ads for the same event. Use original artwork and be creative. Be brief: Too much information is bad information in modern advertising.
  2. Contact local stations, websites, and newspapers to see if they’re willing to plug your event in exchange for promoting them on flyers and other announcements. This is known as a “media sponsorship”. Always phrase your pitch in terms of how they benefit, not you.
  3. You should always include college media in your advertising campaign because in most cases, it’s free.
  4. Do not solely use MySpace or other social networks to promote your event. MySpace is dead, and there is too much clutter to fight through on other networks.
  5. Make sure you advertise where your audience is, not just where the event is. Never violate local posting policy and town / state regulations. Call the town / village / city before you post.
  6. Tell people about the show in person. Americans are increasingly shut in and need convincing to come out. Tell your friends, have them tell their friends. Don’t be annoying. You can tell quickly if someone wants to learn more. If they don’t, thank them and leave.
  7. Band and performer selection is crucial. Since you’re not likely to have a major band performing at a small venue, for example, you need quality bands. Don’t just book a performer because they’re going to bring people. The performer’s “Suck Factor” outweighs drawing ability. You have to keep people at your event, not send them away screaming.
  8. Having an ego is the worst thing this business. Check your ego at the door or pay for it later. Be polite. Always.
  9. Ramming your head into a concrete wall because of frustration is not recommended. Drinking lots of coffee is. Trust me. Concrete hurts.
  10. Make sure you tell people when the event starts. People want to enjoy themselves and get on with their life.
  11. Events should not be more than three hours. Be mindful of setup and tear down times, it will always take longer than you think.
  12. Make sure you and the venue know who is doing what, when, why, and how. A simple, one page agreement should detail who does what and for how long. Do not ever work with a venue, band, or promoter without something signed by both parties explaining responsibilities.
  13. If you’re hosting a major tour with its own crew, be helpful, be polite, and get out of the way.
  14. Something will go wrong. If you’re prepared, you’ll be fine.
  15. With large concerts, don’t assume people are coming. Never, ever assume people are going to come out to anything. You do the best with what you have and plan for the worst.

WRITER'S BIOGRAPHY

BrandonJMendelson

Brandon J. Mendelson is a graduate student attending UAlbany and a published American humorist. You can follow him on Twitter or on his blog, The Graduate Student Survival Blog.

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Comments

  • Irene says on December 12th, 2008 at 10:48 am

    :) there is a smile instead of an 8 and a ) in the text.

  • Brandon J. Mendelson says on December 12th, 2008 at 12:20 pm

    Thank you for letting me know. I will fix it now.

  • jon sofield says on December 12th, 2008 at 4:11 pm

    Zvents powers events & calendars on over 350 Newspaper and media sites in the US… its free ;)

  • Mark Havenner says on December 12th, 2008 at 6:19 pm

    I’d submit that MySpace is not dead and there is still a way through the Facebook clutter. Firstly, finding the groups/networks that fit your target and secondly appealing to the community with a meaningful contribution will get noticed. Just splashing your stuff out there probably won’t.

  • Brandon J. Mendelson says on December 12th, 2008 at 6:23 pm

    Hi Mark,

    I can only speak about MySpace’s place in event promotion through my experience. It peaked in 2004 when I was able to generate a ton of traffic through bulletins and a profile for events, but after that it has been in such a sharp decline that I can’t, again in my opinion, justify why people should take the time or their dollars to advertise on there.

    Unless! Unless you find a way to partner with MySpace and integrate what you’re doing with what they are doing. In their defense, Fox should be proud of the staff there as, in my experience, they are knowledgeable,friendly, and there isn’t much BS.

    Facebook is the same. On your own, it’s not worth the time to advertise. If you can incorporate or work with them in some way, go for it. Out of all of the companies I ever spoke with, Facebook was my favorite.

  • jomar says on December 17th, 2008 at 11:15 am

    Wow. I’m not taking this post seriously since a humorist is writing it…also because the “tips” really don’t help much. A little but not much. Like “be brief, not too many details” in “modern advertising”? This goes against my experience.

  • Brandon J. Mendelson says on December 17th, 2008 at 2:03 pm

    I have been promoting events across the east coast for eight years. Being a humorist does not disqualify me from talking about something I do well.

    How about less commentary and more of your, I hope superior, advice to help our fellow readers?

  • Heather says on December 17th, 2008 at 2:14 pm

    These tips are offered as guidelines to what the writer has found successful/or not through his own experience and the experiences of others. The be brief statement is very true in this modern world. Concise but complete is a great description of what any information needs to be. Not too many people has attention spans long enough to focus on lots of information, so grab them in the intro and tell them everything they need to know in as little time as possible.

  • Jerry says on October 19th, 2009 at 1:31 pm

    “Check your ego at the door” could also translate to no means of advertising should be beneath you.

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