Events can be failed by cost overruns,
poor scheduling and customer dissatisfaction due to a range of factors related
to planning, communication and resource allocation. Here are the five most
common event planning mistakes, and ways smart event planners can avoid them.
Mistake No. 1: Failure to allocate the
right resources, with the right skills.
Problem: It’s
seems fairly obvious that proper event staffing is critical, yet improperly
allocating resources tops the list of most common event management mistakes.
Not having the right people managing an event can be a recipe for disaster. The
key to a successful event is getting the right people with the right skills.
All the planning in the world won't overcome an insufficiency of talent.
Solution: Event managers need full visibility into the skills
and workloads of all of their resources, including vendors, contractors and outsources who often get left out of skills assessments even though they're
doing a "huge" proportion of work. A thorough assessment of all resources
at the outset of the planning process can provide such visibility into
everyone's skills and workloads. Once event planners know everyone's capabilities
and who's doing what, it becomes far easier to figure out how to allocate
resources across the myriad elements and day-to-day work.
Mistake No. 2: Lack of experienced
event managers.
Problem: Event
planning can quickly grow out of control without an experienced event manager
at the helm who knows what they are doing.
Solution: The first step is to hire event managers with
certifications and the finesse required to understand and manage the customer’s
needs. Good event managers have the right combination of ‘soft skills’ and can
demonstrate how to facilitate planning meetings, manage risk and handle a
variety of different stakeholders. it’s really comes down to people skills,
especially given the different stakeholders.
Mistake No. 3: Simple process mistakes
by not following standard, repeatable event management processes.
Problem: This
is a far more common event management mistake than most event planners imagine.
Lack of an agreed upon plan increases the risk that tasks related to the event
will fall through the cracks, that the event will have last minute issues,
fall short on budget and ultimately miss a major objective.
Solution: A
well defined and agreed upon event plan helps planners tackle every task
efficiently and raises the appropriate level of awareness of all the activities
involved in the execution of an event. Having baseline of repeatable processes
for scoping, scheduling, allocating resources and communicating with
stakeholders removes a lot of the guesswork associated with events.
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