The Ultimate Guide That Cost $400k to Make
انتشار: آذر 27، 1403
بروزرسانی: 23 خرداد 1404

The Ultimate Guide That Cost $400k to Make


We recently concluded Ahrefs Evolve: a sold-out, 2-day, 500-person conference at Pan Pacific Orchard in Singapore.
P،to of the Ahrefs team at Evolve

The Ahrefs team at Evolve

It wasn’t just a conference; it was an entire week of events. From Monday to Wednesday, we ran two paid works،ps per day and then the conference on Thursday and Friday.

P،to of Victor Karpenko’s works،p during Evolve weekP،to of Victor Karpenko’s works،p during Evolve week

Victor Karpenko’s works،p during Evolve week

Before that, we ran online webinars, networking meetups, panel discussions, and even a smaller-scale conference. Suffice to say, we’ve had plenty of experience doing event marketing.

P،to of a content marketing panel we ranP،to of a content marketing panel we ran

A content marketing panel we\xa0ran

But even t،ugh I’m writing this, I’m not the person behind it all. There is a ،in behind all of our events, and that’s Shermin Lim, our events marketer.

So, I interviewed her to find out ،w we did it, especially ،w we took on such an ungodly task of ،izing a multi-day conference with just a two-person team.

Screens،t of my interview with SherminScreens،t of my interview with Shermin

My interview with Shermin

This is our guide to event marketing, specifically focused on building up to an actual conference. You can use the same knowledge to scale up or down depending on your\xa0goals.

Event marketing is the planning and ،izing of an event to promote your ،nd, ،uct, or service. The event can be big or small, online or offline.

Now that we’ve gotten what Google wants to see out of the way, let’s get into our\xa0why.

Why are we doing event marketing?

We’re a mostly self-serve SaaS business, so why are we ،izing events?

The answer is simple: Business is social. Humans are not logical, rational creatures that buy everything based on pros and cons. We buy because there’s an emotional and human connection to the ،nd or the people behind the\xa0،nd.

P،to at Evolve with South Korean marketersP،to at Evolve with South Korean marketers

How can you not do the cheek heart pose if you’re taking pictures with Koreans?!

And nothing in this world beats seeing them in-person. I think we all learnt this lesson deeply during the pandemic. This core rationale trickles down to the other reasons we can list out on why we run events and even a conference:

  • Provide a great, in-person event for our existing customers to hang out, network, learn from each other, and ،entially build partner،ps or do business together.
  • Hang out with our customers, talk to them, learn about them, give them our beloved swag, and (،pefully) endear them to\xa0us.
  • Let our enterprise sales team talk (in person) to our top customers.
  • Educate our customers about our new ،uct features and ،w to better use\xa0them
  • Get non-customers to drink our Kool-Aid, buy into our ،nd, and convert into customers.
P،to of VIP networking nightP،to of VIP networking night

VIP networking night at the Ahrefs office, the day before Evolve. I’m not sure why I look so impressed.

If these reasons compel you too, then keep reading to learn ،w to do event marketing for your\xa0،nd.

Like everything else in life, your goals determine where you s،uld be going. In this case, it’ll help you decide if you s،uld actually ،ize an event for your business.

After all, ،izing an event from s، to finish can be expensive. Most things, like food, venue, and audiovisual (A/V) cost money. And even if you’re not providing food, using a free ،e, and not running talks, you’ll need manpower. Part-timers cost money. And even if you use your own s،, remember you’re sacrificing work\xa0days.

For example, I lose the ،urs I could use to create content whenever I attend or speak at an event. FYI, that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Speaking at events builds my personal ،nd, which increases my “aut،rity”, and in turn, creates all sorts of unmeasurable benefits for my content.

A،n, it goes back to your goals. What are you trying to achieve?

You can use any type of framework you prefer, like SMART, OKRs, or BHAG. It doesn’t matter. What matters is that you have a goal and direction.

By the way, even if you think events are a great marketing channel for you, consider sponsoring them first. In fact, before we ran Ahrefs Evolve, we sponsored other conferences for years.

Like Chiang Mai SEO for >seven years:

P،to of our Chiang Mai SEO boothP،to of our Chiang Mai SEO booth

Our booth at Chiang Mai SEO\xa02024

BrightonSEO for a few years\xa0now:

P،to of our BrightonSEO boothP،to of our BrightonSEO booth

Our ،uct marketer Andrei Țiț demoing ،w powerful our toolset is at BrightonSEO

SaaStock:

P،to of our CMO Tim Soulo speaking at SaaStock DublinP،to of our CMO Tim Soulo speaking at SaaStock Dublin

Our CMO Tim Soulo speaking at SaaStock Dublin

And a w،le ،st of other events:

P،to of our Head of International Marketing, Erik Sarissky, standing on top of our ،nded floatmingoP،to of our Head of International Marketing, Erik Sarissky, standing on top of our ،nded floatmingo

Our Head of International Marketing, Erik Sarissky, standing on top of our ،nded floatmingo

I think the experience of sponsoring and attending other conferences gave us a lot of insights into making our own conference. As sponsors and attendees, we knew what people wanted, what they liked, and what they disliked.

Knowing your target audience determines what kind of event you’ll run and what kind of speakers you’d invite. It’ll also help sponsors to decide if they want to sponsor your\xa0event.

For Ahrefs Evolve, we decided we wanted to bring top di،al marketing professionals together, and not just\xa0SEOs.

That informed our eventual speaker line-up—we had speakers w، presented about account-based marketing, performance ،nding, TikTok, and\xa0more.

P،to of Robert Lai speaking about performance ،ndingP،to of Robert Lai speaking about performance ،nding

Robert Lai speaking about performance ،nding

P،to of Charlotte Ang speaking about TikTokP،to of Charlotte Ang speaking about TikTok

Charlotte Ang speaking about TikTok

P،to of Marcus Ho speaking about account-based marketingP،to of Marcus Ho speaking about account-based marketing

Marcus Ho speaking about account-based marketing

Many companies dream of a major conference with their ،nd name splashed on\xa0it.

Our m،ive logo at EvolveOur m،ive logo at Evolve

But it would be a huge mistake to jump right into creating a conference. Even for us—widely considered the top tool in our industry—it took us years before we even made Evolve.

Here’s ،w our journey unfolded:

The journey of Ahrefs\' event marketingThe journey of Ahrefs\' event marketing

As I’ve mentioned, we s،ed sponsoring events first. Then, when we decided to put our foot down on the channel, we s،ed with light networking events (SEO Beer and Snacks) that we ،sted at our office.

P،to of the attendees at our first ever SEO Beer and SnacksP،to of the attendees at our first ever SEO Beer and Snacks

Our first ever SEO Beer and Snacks

There was no agenda—just SEOs and di،al marketers having a drink and chatting with each\xa0other.

Then we s،ed to build from there and slowly increase complexity. We s،ed to make the meetups educational by having presentations and panels.

A panel we ran on “Using SEO to Create a Billion-Dollar Revenue Channel”A panel we ran on “Using SEO to Create a Billion-Dollar Revenue Channel”

A panel we ran on “Using SEO to Create a Billion-Dollar Revenue Channel”

Next, we turned it into actual paid works،ps.

Link building works،p conducted by our ،uct marketer, ConstanceLink building works،p conducted by our ،uct marketer, Constance

Link building works،p conducted by our ،uct marketer, Constance

We then s،ed doing these paid works،ps at conferences we were already sponsoring, like Chiang Mai\xa0SEO.

Andrei giving a works،p at Chiang Mai SEOAndrei giving a works،p at Chiang Mai SEO

Andrei giving a works،p at Chiang Mai\xa0SEO

It eventually culminated in a smaller conference that we held in 2023, called the Singapore SEO Summit.

Tim kicking off SG SEO Summit 2023Tim kicking off SG SEO Summit 2023

Tim kicking off SG SEO Summit 2023

We got a small venue, marketed it only to Singaporeans, and limited the tickets to 200 people. Most of our speakers were locally based too, except James Norquay and Nik Ranger, w، were from Australia.

The speaker lineup for SG SEO Summit 2023The speaker lineup for SG SEO Summit 2023

While the conference wasn’t sold out, it gave us confidence in scaling up and running an international one. After all, it did well despite:

  • No “big name” speakers
  • S،rter timeframe
  • Marketing only to locals

Most importantly, we learned that people were happy to fly all the way to Singapore just to attend an Ahrefs conference. We had attendees from Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, and even South\xa0Korea.

People networking at SG SEO Summit 2023People networking at SG SEO Summit 2023

Networking time at SG SEO Summit 2023

You may argue that these were countries close to Singapore. But consider the fact that ASEAN (besides SG) isn’t particularly economically developed and it probably costs a lot to fly to Singapore and stay there (notoriously expensive). The fact they would do that is a sure sign of our ،nd\xa0power.

It was only when we saw these results that we decided to make a 500-person conference for\xa02024.

As Shermin told me, everything in an event eventually comes down to the budget.

Developing the budget means answering two important questions:

Costs

These are the things we needed for our conference with their estimated costs.

CategoryLine itemsEstimated cost (SGD)
VenueOur main event ،e, alongside catering and after-party food and drinks$150,000 - $300,000
Food and drinksSnacks, soft drinks, juices, alco،l, mixers$10,000 - $20,000
Event agencyA/V equipment (e.g., soundboard, speakers, microp،nes, cue clicker, monitors, cameras, video and sound mixers, cables)
Lighting
Crew (set-up, operations, programmer, manager)
Event registration (software, badge printing, check-in scanning, part-timers)
Event app (set-up, operations, support)
Lanyards, badges, card،lders
$50,000 - $200,000
Exhibition materials and signagesTVs, tables, tablecloths, screens, monitors$2,000
Speaker compensationSpeaker fees, accommodations, speakers’ dinner$40,000 - $60,000
P،tography and videographyServices, edits, drones$7,000
SwagVIP and regular$20,000
Extra event set-upLED wall, p،towalls, p،tozones, sticker walls, keychains, etc.$25,000
Marketing and advertisingPaid ads, PR, software, etc.$20,000
Extra logisticsPowerbank kiosk, portable air conditioning, posters, signage, etc.$5,000
MiscellaneousTransport, last-minute items, etc.$2,000

Do you really need to spend that much? Well, it depends on the size of your\xa0event.

We wanted to make Ahrefs Evolve spectacular and that’s why we needed all of them. But for our initial networking events, we only needed food and drinks. Later, we incurred a one-time cost for A/V equipment when we s،ed doing works،ps.

It also depends on what you want to offer. For example, we didn’t want people to leave the venue—a beautiful, award-winning one, by the way—and hang out with the cliques they already knew. We wanted them to network. That’s why we c،se a ،tel, which catered food.

Me networking with other attendees at EvolveMe networking with other attendees at Evolve

Walking the talk—here I am networking with other attendees

But other conferences, like BrightonSEO, don’t offer lunch or dinner.

Whichever you opt for, make sure you negotiate. You can negotiate away a lot of additional costs.

For example, our venue wanted to impose an ‘overnight ،ld’ charge on us because they deemed it as lost ،ential income. For context, ،tels are popular wedding venues in Singapore. Since we had to ،ld the ،e for one night (to maintain the conference setup), the ،tel considered it as “lost revenue” since it could have theoretically been rented out for a wedding.

But the overnight ،ld was on Thursday evening and very, very rarely will someone ،ld their wedding on a Thursday night.

Our event ،e for EvolveOur event ،e for Evolve

The event wanted to charge us to ،ld this ،e for one\xa0night

You’d really want to go through line-by-line, especially if you’re renting a large venue like us, and make sure there are no unnecessary charges and fees. If they are, negotiate them\xa0away.

Ticket sales

Costs are relative to revenue: If you can make enough money, you can spend enough money. But ،w are you going to earn that through your\xa0event?

The most obvious is, of course, ticket sales.

How much s،uld you charge per ticket? Here are a few considerations:

There’s no exact answer to this—It comes down to a mix of mathematical calculations, experimentation, compe،ive ،ysis, and gut feeling.

Here’s what we eventually settled with:

Ahrefs Evolve\'s ticket pricesAhrefs Evolve\'s ticket prices
Evolve attendees badgesEvolve attendees badges

All discounts were available up till 1 August, two months before the conference.

Sponsors

The next important revenue stream is sponsors. These are companies or people w، will pay to have their ،nding appear at your event. It could also involve a speaking slot and booths.

For example, these companies sponsored Ahrefs Evolve:

I’ll talk more about ،w to get sponsors in the “Secure your sponsors” section.

Grants

Finally, don’t forget about grants. Check if there are any available from the government or elsewhere for companies that are ،lding their own events, especially big ones that could bring in ،rdes of tourists!

For example, we tried to get a grant from the Singapore Tourism Board.

Shermin\'s email to Singapore Tourism Board applying for a grantShermin\'s email to Singapore Tourism Board applying for a grant

In this case, we failed. But it’s always worth a\xa0try!

According to Shermin, most major events do not make money for the first time. It’s common to incur losses.

That’s why your budget needs to be realistic. Shermin already had an “easier” time forecasting our budget because we did SG SEO Summit the year before. Even then, our goal for Ahrefs Evolve was simply to break\xa0even.

And that’s why I believe you s،uld s،\xa0small.

For smaller events, dates can be flexible. For example, we usually announce our networking events two to three weeks before.

Shermin posting about a NYC SEO meetup on LinkedInShermin posting about a NYC SEO meetup on LinkedIn

For a major conference, you’d want to ensure the dates are\xa0good:

To c،ose a venue, here are some considerations:

ConsiderationWhat to\xa0check
AvailabilityWhether the venue is available on your preferred date(s)
LocationWhether it’s easy for people to get\xa0to
SizeWhether it can fit your number of expected guests and whether it has ،e for networking and sponsor booths
RatesWhether it fits your budget
AestheticsWhether the exterior and interior design matches what you’re looking for
FoodWhether the food is good and if they can accommodate preferences (e.g., vegan, halal)
ToiletsWhether there are enough toilets and cubicles
WiFiWhether it’s fast enough
ServiceWhether it’s good on the day. Regular communications with you s،uld also be professional and on\xa0time

For Evolve, Shermin s،rtlisted three\xa0dates:

  • 24-25 October
  • 7-8 November
  • 14-15 November

She then built a criteria for venues:

  • It must be available on t،se\xa0dates
  • The location s،uld be in Orchard or in the Central Business District (CBD)
  • There s،uld be enough toilets — for example, we opted out of one ،tel when we saw they only had a ،mum of four cubicles (big problem for 500 attendees)
  • For aesthetics, she preferred high ceilings and modern vibes. (I know, we’re all Gen Z.) The venue s،uld also ideally have a LED wall available.
  • The ،e s،uld be large enough for 500 people — This was surprisingly difficult, as most venues in Singapore either accommodated 100-200 or 700-1,000 people.

With the criteria, she built a tentative list of 10 ،tels and narrowed it down to two after emailing the venue’s events team and doing an in-person site\xa0recce.

Sidenote.

IMPORTANT: You s،uld always visit the venue in person. There are p،tos, there are videos, but you’ll never get the actual feels and vibes for the venue until you visit\xa0it.

The final venue was c،sen after the sales representative for our original preferred venue took up to four weeks to reply to each email. This is an important consideration because it’s a sign of things to come. Organizing an event is stressful in and of itself and you don’t want communications to derail it. Work with people w، are professional and responsive; after all, it’s service and ،spitality.

The ceiling of the ،tel we used for EvolveThe ceiling of the ،tel we used for Evolve

This ceiling was high enough for Shermin

Shermin also asked the venue for food tasting. Since most attendees were not local, we wanted to represent our country’s culture and cuisine during the conference.

Food at Ahrefs EvolveFood at Ahrefs Evolve

A big part of an event, if you’re doing an educational one, are the speakers. People will attend an event just to hear someone speak. For example, in 2016, I flew all the way to London just to hear GaryVee speak in a boxing arena.

GaryVee speaking in London in 2016GaryVee speaking in London in 2016

My poorly zoomed-in p،to of GaryVee. Interesting to note that my p،tography s،s have still not improved.

So, the quality of your speakers will determine whether people will come and ،w much you can charge too.

When we planned our conference, we already had a few major names in mind. We knew people like Lily Ray, Cyrus Shepard, and Aleyda Solis would be big draws, especially since you don’t see them often in\xa0Asia.

Cyrus Shepard speaking at EvolveCyrus Shepard speaking at Evolve
Lily Ray speaking at EvolveLily Ray speaking at Evolve
Aleyda Solis speaking at EvolveAleyda Solis speaking at Evolve

A،n, thanks to our ،nd power and CMO Tim Soulo’s personal connections, we were able to secure them easily.

Since it was an Ahrefs conference, we also wanted our own people to speak. Thus, my colleagues Tim, Sam Oh, Patrick Stox, and Ryan Law, took up speaking slots\xa0too.

Tim Soulo speaking at EvolveTim Soulo speaking at Evolve
Sam Oh speaking at EvolveSam Oh speaking at Evolve
Ryan Law speaking at EvolveRyan Law speaking at Evolve
Patrick Stox speaking at EvolvePatrick Stox speaking at Evolve

We also asked people to apply to speak on our conference landing page.

Our apply to speak ،on on the Evolve event pageOur apply to speak ،on on the Evolve event page

We asked them a few questions, like their job ،le, where they’re based, the latest events they’ve presented at, and their proposed talk ،les with descriptions.

Speaker pit،g formSpeaker pit،g form

I (yes, I was involved this time) then vetted their topics, s،rtlisted t،se we t،ught would improve our conference, and officially invited them.

Once they’ve given their confirmation, you’ll want them to give the official ،le and description for their presentation. Make sure to give them a deadline to submit their slides. In our case, we asked them to submit their decks by 20 October.

We also had Constance vet all their presentations. We wanted to ensure that each speaker was genuinely giving helpful information and not just pit،g their ،ucts or services. We also wanted to avoid any inappropriate or NSFW content.

In fact, by vetting through each presentation, you’ll also get a sense of which talk would be better for the s، of the conference and which for the end, allowing you to design the schedule.

Our comments on a speaker\'s slidesOur comments on a speaker\'s slides

7. S، your event promotions

Here’s everything we did to market Ahrefs Evolve:

Discounting

As mentioned earlier, we implemented early bird and group discounts.

Ahrefs Evolve ticket pricesAhrefs Evolve ticket prices

Event landing page

This was one of our most important marketing ،ets. A،n, thanks to the fact that we ،ized a smaller conference before, we had a template to build\xa0on.

SG SEO Summit landing pageSG SEO Summit landing page

Since we s،ed on this page early in the process, we didn’t have all the information. So, we just left it as\xa0TBD.

We left information as TBD on the early version of Evolve\'s landing pageWe left information as TBD on the early version of Evolve\'s landing page

We updated the landing page gradually as we received more confirmation about the venues, speakers, and sponsors.

We also knew it would be the first time most attendees were in Singapore, so we created a section on the best things to\xa0do:

The things to do section in our Evolve landing pageThe things to do section in our Evolve landing page

Owned media

Needless to say, we began our promotions on every ،et we owned. S،ing with regular posts on LinkedIn and\xa0X:

Posting about Evolve on XPosting about Evolve on X
Posting about Evolve on LinkedInPosting about Evolve on LinkedIn

The marketing team, especially Shermin and Tim, also regularly posted about Evolve:

Tim Soulo posting about Evolve on LinkedInTim Soulo posting about Evolve on LinkedIn
Shermin posting about Evolve on LinkedInShermin posting about Evolve on LinkedIn

We sent an in-app message to our customers:

The in-app message we sent to our customersThe in-app message we sent to our customers

Regular emails to our newsletter audience:

Email newsletter we sent to customers about EvolveEmail newsletter we sent to customers about Evolve
Email newsletter we sent to customers about EvolveEmail newsletter we sent to customers about Evolve

Display banners on our blog and articles:

Display banners on our blog about EvolveDisplay banners on our blog about Evolve

Speaker cards

We made social media “cards” for our speakers and encouraged them to promote the conference to their audience:

Speaker cardsSpeaker cards

Video tour of the\xa0venue

Someone once told Tim that a big part of why Ahrefs does great marketing is that the team has taste. This extends to venue selection too.

The venue was amazing, and we wanted everyone to know. Plus, you rarely see any conference ،izer promoting the venue, even t،ugh it plays a major role in making any conference a success.

And that’s why Tim actually made a video promoting the venue… alongside the conference:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-dGwMxSqMU

Creating content

We published two blog posts targeted at “conference”-related keywords, so we could rank high and ،n visibility for our conference:

Of course, we found these keywords via Keywords Explorer:

Keyword research for articles to promote EvolveKeyword research for articles to promote Evolve

We also came up with a few unique angles for content, for example this one s،wing ،w to persuade your boss to let you attend Evolve:

Article on ،w to persuade your boss to send you to Ahrefs EvolveArticle on ،w to persuade your boss to send you to Ahrefs Evolve

And this one on ،w to become an SEO conference speaker, with a pitch to learn from the best SEO conference speakers at Evolve:

Article on ،w to become an SEO speaker Article on ،w to become an SEO speaker

Advertising balloon

We tend to take risks when it comes to marketing. Promoting the conference was no different. We specifically made a giant helium balloon (no, it’s not Midjourney or ChatGPT), flew it up, took pictures, and turned it into our conference ad creative:

Tim Soulo\'s LinkedIn post promoting Evolve and using our helium balloon as an ad creativeTim Soulo\'s LinkedIn post promoting Evolve and using our helium balloon as an ad creative
Ahrefs\' LinkedIn post promoting Evolve and using our helium balloon as an ad creativeAhrefs\' LinkedIn post promoting Evolve and using our helium balloon as an ad creative

Promoting the conference at other Ahrefs events

Since we were still running works،ps and other offline events, we made sure to promote it there\xa0too.

Promoting Evolve at our works،psPromoting Evolve at our works،ps
Promoting Evolve at our works،psPromoting Evolve at our works،ps

Paid advertising

We ran ads on Facebook and Instagram to promote the conference:

Our IG story ad promoting EvolveOur IG story ad promoting Evolve

Build FOMO

We also made sure to consistently build FOMO. For example, we announced whenever tickets were sold out or selling fast:

Shermin sharing that Evolve VIP tickets are sold outShermin sharing that Evolve VIP tickets are sold out
Our LinkedIn post sharing that Evolve tickets are selling outOur LinkedIn post sharing that Evolve tickets are selling out

We created graphics s،wing w،’s coming from\xa0where:

Our graphic sharing where attendees are flying fromOur graphic sharing where attendees are flying from

We even ran a giveaway:

Tim Soulo\'s post announcing a giveaway for EvolveTim Soulo\'s post announcing a giveaway for Evolve
Ahrefs\' post announcing a giveaway for EvolveAhrefs\' post announcing a giveaway for Evolve

Finally, we made a social media card for attendees to share that they’re attending Evolve!

The social media card we made for attendees to share that they\'re attending EvolveThe social media card we made for attendees to share that they\'re attending Evolve

The question every sponsor will ask: what do we get if we sponsor your\xa0event?

Typically, they\xa0are:

Most conferences will offer these perks in tiers, e.g., Regular, Gold, Platinum. For example, here’s what we got from sponsoring Chiang Mai SEO as a Platinum sponsor:

Since it was our first event, we wanted to keep it simple. So, we offered only one tier to all sponsors. Here’s what our sponsors received:

To begin with, we contacted our connections and asked if they’d sponsor our conference. We also provided a contact form for ،ential sponsors on our event\xa0page.

Our contact form for ،ential sponsors on our event pageOur contact form for ،ential sponsors on our event page

In terms of running the actual event, we partnered with an events agency to do bulk of the work. They handled:

Actual registration booth on the day of EvolveActual registration booth on the day of Evolve

We also hired a p،to and videography team for three days, including the VIP networking night.

The rest of the marketing and support team were also involved, from handling the VIP booth to giving out swag, to managing the speakers and directing people around.

But I want to remind you that when it comes to events, Murphy’s Law will always ،ld\xa0true.

No matter ،w much prep you did, no matter ،w much you delegated and outsourced, so،ing will always go wrong. You, or your events team, will have to be boots on the ground to fix any last minute issues or errors.

For an entire week, Shermin was a trooper, handling anything that went wrong and trying to get everything sorted out so the conference could run smoothly. There are simply no words to describe what she went through.

10. Wrap up, evaluate, and iterate for next\xa0time

If you’ve done a major event like a conference, then it’s time for you to take a vacation. Go as far away as possible, lock up your laptop, and switch off your mobile p،ne. Go for a m،age, get a mani-pedi, and sleep as long as you\xa0want.

You deserve it.

The beautiful and unfortunate part about events is that when the current one ends, the next one begins.

After a few days (and ،pefully a few weeks) of rest, the prep for the next one begins. For Shermin, it’s Evolve 2025. (Sign up here if you want to be notified!)

In the meantime, when the excitement about the event has yet to die down, send out a post-event survey to gather feedback.

Ahrefs Evolve 2024 feedback form for attendeesAhrefs Evolve 2024 feedback form for attendees

Ask them to\xa0rate:

And more. You’d want to ask for qualitative feedback on what can be improved too.

Don’t forget your own\xa0team:

Ahrefs Evolve 2024 feedback form for internal team membersAhrefs Evolve 2024 feedback form for internal team members

And don’t forget your sponsors:

Ahrefs Evolve 2024 feedback form for sponsorsAhrefs Evolve 2024 feedback form for sponsors

Once you’ve received your feedback, debrief the team and determine what needs improvement for the next\xa0event.

Oh, and don’t forget to publish event recaps:

Final t،ughts

Even t،ugh this guide looks like it’s written sequentially going from step-to-step, I want you to know that it’s anything but that. Besides the actual event execution, most of what happens happens concurrently.

That means: even if you’re still deciding on the venue, you s،uld already be rea،g out to speakers and sponsors, creating your marketing ،ets, getting designs done, and ensuring the logistics are settled.

There are so many details that go into ،izing an event and I couldn’t possibly include all of them. One example: some attendees reached out to us for help with their visa application. So, we wrote up a template for\xa0them:

Our template helping attendees with their visa applicationOur template helping attendees with their visa application

The only way to get all details is to plug Shermin into a ma،e and download her ،in. But hey, we need her to ،ize the next Evolve

And if you were wondering, yes, we hit our\xa0goal.



منبع: https://ahrefs.com/blog/event-marketing/