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You Said Yes to Running the Event
Maybe it was the trivia night. Maybe the end-of-season dinner. Maybe the annual fundraiser. Someone asked, and you said yes. Now you need to actually make it happen.
This playbook covers the practical mechanics. Not event theory. The actual steps from announcement to follow-up.
Six Weeks Out: Planning
Confirm the basics. Date, venue, capacity, budget. Get committee approval if spending is required.
Set ticket types and pricing. Member price versus guest price. Early bird if applicable. Family pricing if families are coming.
Create the event in TidyHQ. Title, description, date, venue, ticket types, pricing, capacity limit, dietary requirements question. The registration page generates automatically.
Set a budget. Venue hire, catering, entertainment, decorations, prizes. Get the expected revenue from ticket sales. Make sure the numbers work before committing.
Four Weeks Out: Promotion
Announce. Newsletter, Facebook, WhatsApp group, Instagram. Include the registration link. Make it one click to register and pay.
Personal invitations. For the people you really want there — new members, sponsors, special guests — a personal message converts better than a broadcast.
Partner with local businesses. Raffle prizes, catering partnerships, sponsor acknowledgment. Local businesses often say yes when asked nicely.
Two Weeks Out: Logistics
Check registrations. How many confirmed? Is it tracking toward your target? If not, send a reminder and personal invitations to the fence-sitters.
Confirm catering. Final numbers based on registrations. Include dietary requirements from the registration data.
Prepare materials. Run sheet for the evening. Name tags if needed. Raffle tickets. Audio-visual requirements.
Volunteer roster. Who is helping with setup, registration desk, bar, clean-up? Confirm each person.
Day Of: Execution
Setup. Arrive early. Check venue, audio, catering, signage.
Check-in. Use TidyHQ's event check-in on a phone or tablet. Tap the name, mark as arrived. Beats paper lists and highlighters.
Run the event. Follow the run sheet. Start on time. Keep it moving. Thank the volunteers.
Collect feedback. A one-question survey at the end: "Would you come to this event again?" Keep it simple.
Day After: Follow-Up
Thank-you message. Within 24 hours. Include photos. Thank the volunteers by name.
Financial reconciliation. Ticket revenue minus expenses. Report to the treasurer.
Attendance data. Log attendance against member profiles. Track who came and who did not. This data informs future events.
Debrief. What worked? What did not? What would you change? Write it down for the next event coordinator.
The Secret
The best-run club events are not creative masterpieces. They are well-organised logistics with good communication. The idea matters less than the execution. Get the mechanics right and the event takes care of itself.
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