Archive for July 2010

How to … Find a venue / Promote a venue

28th July 2010 by Darren Scurville

Design Inc’s Event & Venue Specialist, Darren Scurville has been in the fortunate position to experience both sides of the coin when choosing and promoting a venue having worked for over 10 years as a high-end event organiser and in his current role at Design Incorporated.

Darren explains, “From a venue’s point of view I was their archetypal buyer. From the clients side I was the trusted, experienced and venue expert.

This experience has provided valuable insight into the decision making process for companies selecting a venue for their own events and the essential marketing requirements when a venue needs to promote themselves”.

I have summarised the criteria for Venue Finding and Venue Promotion as follows:

Venue finding

Venue finding provides a mammoth task for many people every day with more and more corporate events being held every year. More than 80% of the success of any event, meeting, conference or any type of event is dependent on the choice of the venue itself. Spending money in venues should be looked upon as an investment in your company’s future and should not be looked at without due consideration. Consider your requirements fully, look at the venue carefully and book the venue confidently.

Start early! Venue finding can be a very time consuming exercise. It is never too early to start looking for a suitable venue. If you are thinking about hosting an event, then you can be sure that there are dozens of other companies thinking about hosting one also.

Identify your objectives and format - what do you want to achieve from your event and how are you going to achieve it? Is it increased sales, sales recognition, employee motivation, product launch, customer appreciation day, etc?

Attendees - How many people are you going to invite? Who will be attending – employees, existing customers, prospective customers, media, members of the public, any VIP’s or celebrities?

Location, location, location - where do you want to host the event? Close to company offices; easy access from major road networks, train stations or airports or in a luxury countryside setting away from it all? Consider the widest geographic area. Think not just in terms of miles but minutes of commuting time. A location may be further away but well served by motorway and other transport links

Budget - Yes, this is important and needs to be realistic to your objectives? Has one been approved? How does it compare to other events you have arranged? What does the budget actually need to cover? Set a budget you are comfortable with. Everyone has financial constraints but you need to get the best value for your spend.

Specialist Support – Of course, there are many venue finding specialists you can call upon who will know the ins and outs of hundreds of potential venues. These companies can help reduce the aggravation, time and hopefully cost in finding & booking your venue. Be sure you provide a full brief as to your requirements, which could include:

Venue style and service quality
Does the venue have a high level of standards and ethics
Accommodation proximity
Quality of food and beverage services
AV production support
Availability of meeting space, activity rooms, discussion space and break out areas
Specific room dimensions, capacities, ceiling heights, natural daylight and lift access etc
Compliancy with the Disability Discrimination Act
Dietary requirements; kosher, halal, gluten-free, vegan etc?
Availability of team building activities, florists, entertainment and games for after dinner, etc
Does the venue provide creative production services and inspiration for themed events?

Venue Promotion

Building an effective venue-marketing plan is like sowing a field for a successful crop. There are certain methods that are absolutely necessary. You can tweak a little here and there adding your own special methods as long as you include the main components’

Distributing seeds instead of planting them in one place by not just reaching people individually and telling them what your venue does or has is a tough way to do it and an uphill battle. Instead thinking of each person you interact with, as someone who can carry the seed of your venue to someone else is valuable. Your goal shouldn’t be just to convince them, it’s to give them some way, large or small to carry your venue message forward.

How are you as a venue making things happen and distributing the message? Do you…..

Blog – demonstrating your venue industry awareness, expertise, knowledge and establish yourself as a recognised venue industry voice connecting to the topics of the moment.

Send tactical e-shots & newsletters – To reach out and engage with your audience, telling them about your venue’s successes, latest events at your venue, your venues new features, the venues new services or even the venues new staff. Also to solidify your current client relationships, strengthen your venue ‘brand’ and keep your venue constantly in the public eye.

Strategically Advertise – With calculated planning, compelling copywriting and powerful messaged advertising design for your entire venue advertising campaigns. Making sure it is tailored to appeal to your target market using compelling and strategic design, graphics and messaging to entice a reaction, an enquiry and a venue booking.

Design your marketing collateral tactically – Making sure your brochure and direct mail pieces truly reflect and delivers your venue’s image, values and core services. Creating interactive elements such as incentivised response devices for data capture and the use of enticing formats and tactile materials.

Stand out at Exhibitions – to distinguish and differentiate your venue amongst all the other venues doing the same thing. Making sure your stand fascinates, captivates, generates interest, interacts with your audiences, creates the WOW factor and leaves a compelling impression on your visitor.

Optimise your Website – incorporating strategic, valuable keywords & phrases that relate specifically to your industry so your prospective clients find your website ahead of your competitors and integrate strategic creative designs, high impact copywriting and a fully comprehensive statistics area to gather that all-important marketing data.

For More Information & Design Inc’s Portfolio click here

How to Create an Effective Website – Blogs

16th July 2010 by Frank Norman

The addition of a News Blog offers many benefits to so many types of businesses, professionals and individuals. Engage and connect with your clients and prospects online, initially through attracting them through the search engine optimisation qualities a blog has to offer and then stay connected with them through RSS feeds.

Search engines favour constantly updated websites containing rich and relevant content, so make regular company and industry comment, post news and media bulletins, and link it all with your Twitter and other social media accounts such as LinkedIn to spread a strong and consistent message across all forms of online media.

Of course, if you have already gone through the process of keyword research, you will already have a list of highly relevant & Google-friendly keywords. These can be added into your daily/weekly blogs to significantly increase the flow of visitors to your site. Remember, for every blog story you add, Google will see this as yet another content-rich page on your site. And, the more of these pages you have, the higher up the search rankings you will appear.

Blog systems are fully content manageable and offer detailed controls to ensure each entry is both creative and powerful within search engines. Style text, add images, set links, categorise stories and automatically archive all entries for total ease of navigation for the user.

Blogs have usually been written by one person, although more and more companies are setting up their blog to allow different staff members to contribute. This enables the blog to be kept regularly up-to-date (especially when the bloggers are on blog rota) as well as promoting a different message about the company. This would enable a company to better cover stories relating to product, sales, marketing, manufacture, despatch, aftercare, etc.

And, as already mentioned, the more blog articles with content-rich (key)words, the more Google will find your website when searches are made.

If you are considering a forthcoming creative/marketing project, you may be interested in receiving Design Inc’s  Information Pack.