OK, this is it: you’ve got an amazing event idea, locked down your venue, and negotiated your talent line-up. 

Unfortunately, that was the easy part — now you’ve got to market your event and sell some tickets!

Event marketing is all about getting the right messaging out to the right people so that you can sell tickets and get attendees through the door. But to do so, you’ll need to spread your event messaging across multiple platforms and formats and over a period of time.

Eventbrite is the world’s largest events community, and we help hundreds of thousands of event creators all over the world develop and promote their upcoming events every single day. 

Better yet, we’ve also got a wide range of Marketing Tools that can help you execute your entire event marketing plan flawlessly.

Read on to download our template and find out the key stages to include in your event marketing plan.

Event Marketing Plan

8–12 months before your event

3–4 months before your event

2 months before your event

1 week before your event

During your event

2 days after your event

2 weeks after your event

Illustration of event creator holding a checklist

Start planning with Eventbrite’s free event marketing plan template

Not every event creator is a natural when it comes to event marketing. That’s why a premade template to help develop your event marketing strategy can really help.

An event marketing plan template is also a smart way to keep every team member in sync. You can use live, cloud-hosted documents to customize, tag, and hyperlink all the relevant information — all while maintaining a single source of truth that everyone on your team can use to steer their marketing projects.

Here’s how to use your event marketing plan template 

To get started, we’ll walk you through each section and provide ideas (and real examples) of the types of promotional activities to use at each key stage.

8–12 months before your event

No matter what type of event you’re promoting, you should plan on kickstarting the marketing process as early as possible. 

By giving yourself a minimum of eight months, you’ll be able to carefully consider each element of your event marketing strategy to make sure you’re ticking all the right boxes to optimize your content and land major ticket sales.

This post from event creator Brickworld should give you an idea of the type of content to promote at this stage: event specifics, such as dates, locations, and the venue itself are good focal points.

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A post shared by Brickworld Events (@brickworld)

By announcing ticket sales from the moment their Brickworld Chicago 2024 event went live, organizers put themselves in a great position to cultivate awareness early on and kick start ticket sales eight months out.

💡 Pro tip: Make sure you’ve got an accessible event page to start selling tickets the moment you start marketing your event.

Ready to start selling tickets?

People in line for an event

3–4 months before your event

When you’re nearing four months to your event, you should have your line-up of speakers or entertainment confirmed. That means it’s time to create and distribute a series of email campaigns promoting your line-up.

This post from event creator Ball Drop is a great example of how you can start teasing your audience with an upcoming event like their New Year’s Eve Gala around the three-month mark.

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A post shared by New Years Eve Tickets (@balldropnyc)

It’s short, sweet and to the point — not to mention uses engaging and on-brand graphics. But most importantly, it points directly to where followers can buy a ticket for the event.

💡 Pro tip: If you want to save money on your paid campaigns, make sure you’re using a platform like Eventbrite to optimize your paid posts. 

With the help of A/B testing, AI-generated content to inspire you, and scheduling recommendations, you can achieve your social campaign goals without breaking the bank.

Two event creator promote an upcoming event
Coal Drops Yard / Hoop Blast / London, UK

2 months before your event

With two months to go, your marketing plan has to start focusing on teaser content and generating ticket sales. 

If you want to see how influencer marketing is done the right way, look no further than event creator Pretty Princess Parties.

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A post shared by Fairytale Celebrations LLC (@fairytalecelebrations)

Founder Jodi Polaski regularly utilizes movers and shakers across the children’s entertainment space (as well as local communities) to showcase the best of Pretty Princess Parties events and give parents social proof to feel confident purchasing tickets.

💡 Pro tip: If you want to streamline your automated email campaigns, try using Eventbrite’s integration with Mailchimp. It enables you to pull data directly from your registrations list into a new Mailchimp audience to create seamless customer journeys.

1 week before your event

With one week to go, we’re getting into crunch time.

If you need a bit of inspiration in this department, check out creator Bollywood Dreams.

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A post shared by DJ PRASHANT (@dreamprashant)

Founder DJ Prashant always hits the right notes in the run-up to his club events with engaging reminders, last-minute offers, and exclusive ticket giveaways to get stragglers over the finish line and get them out to party.

💡 Pro tip: Want to automate your reminders? If you’re using Eventbrite, we’ll automatically set up an email reminder to go out to your attendees 48 hours before the event starts. But you can customize the content to make sure ticket holders are getting all the essential info they’ll need on the day.

Illustration of an event creator taking notes with an event template in the background

During your event

Just because the venue doors are open and your guests are lined up doesn’t mean your event marketing is complete. 

For lessons in best practice, take a look at Eventbrite creator Bob’s Dance Shop

They do an amazing job at keeping followers up-to-date with content during their events — including previews and reminders to anybody at home to drop what they’re doing and come to their event.

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A post shared by 𝘽𝙤𝙗𝙨 𝘿𝙖𝙣𝙘𝙚 𝙎𝙝𝙤𝙥 (@bobsdanceshop)

💡 Pro tip: Begin planning for your next event already by making sure you have a professional photographer in place who can take high-quality visuals that you can use for promotional material for future events.

2 days after your event

Your post-event marketing should focus on de-briefing your attendees — and showing off your amazing event to everybody that missed out.

Event creator Art Battle International does this really well. Their post-event content gives followers a quick taste of what they missed — and they always tag artists and venues to get more people involved in the conversation.

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A post shared by artbattle (@artbattle)

💡 Pro tip: Planning a post-event survey? According to the experts over at SurveyMonkey, the best time to send out a survey is between 48 hours and 72 hours after the event has finished.

2 weeks after your event

Two weeks after your event has finished, you can start winding things down — but that doesn’t mean you should stop marketing.

Having access to a tool like Eventbrite Marketing Tools can streamline this process because you’ll have all the key information sitting on one convenient dashboard. Likewise, you’ll already have all of your attendance figures to determine who showed up, who engaged, and which segments of your target audience you could do a better job engaging with in the future.

For best practices in posting on social after your event, take a look at creator VIP Nightlife. The post-event highlights reel of their Maxim Halloween Party in LA is an absolute masterclass in making people wish they’d bought tickets:

💡 Pro tip: If you held a virtual event or a hybrid event, don’t forget to send one final reminder around the two-week mark reminding users that they can access your event content on-demand. This ensures all your attendees get the most out of available content.

Illustration of event creator holding a checklist

Ready to complete your event marketing plan?

OK: You’ve got the perfect event marketing plan template, you know how to complete it, and you’ve got some examples of promotional content that’ll hit home with your target audience. 

Now, it’s your time to shine.

Download our free event marketing plan template, and tick off the steps as you complete them to improve your chances of hosting a successful event.