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The special events
industry has grown enormously in the past decade. According to
recent research conducted by Dr. Joe Goldblatt, CSEP
(Certified Special Events Professional), spending for special
events in the United States alone is at least $800 billion
annually. Goldblatt is the founder of International Special
Events Society (ISES), the founding director of the Event
Management Program at George Washington University, and
co-author of
The
International Dictionary of Event Management.
“Suffice it to say, the marketplace is large enough to
support and sustain your endeavor,” says Goldblatt. “If
you’re working in one special events area, there are many
directions in which you can expand. If you’re just entering
the profession of special events, there’s a lucrative market
awaiting you on many fronts.”
According to Goldblatt’s research, profits in this industry
continue to rise. Just a few years ago, Goldblatt says, the
average profit margin for an event planning entrepreneur was
around 15 percent. His most recent studies, however, show
profit margins anywhere from 15 to 40 percent. He attributes
the industry’s good health to several factors, including the
improved economy and the trend of corporate America to
outsource their meeting-planning functions.
What Is Event Planning?
This question actually breaks down into two questions: What
kinds of events are we talking about? And, what is event
planning?
First things first. Generally speaking, special events
occur for the following purposes:
-
Celebrations (fairs, parades, weddings, reunions,
birthdays, anniversaries)
-
Education (conferences, meetings, graduations)
-
Promotions (product launches, political rallies, fashion
shows)
-
Commemorations (memorials, civic events)
This list isn’t an exhaustive one, but as the examples
illustrate, special events may be business related, purely
social or somewhere in between.
Now we move to the second question: What is event planning?
Planners of an event may handle any or all of the following
tasks related to that event:
- Conducting research
- Creating an event design
- Finding a site
- Arranging for food, decor and entertainment
- Planning transportation to and from the event
- Sending invitations to attendees
- Arranging any necessary accommodations for attendees
- Coordinating the activities of event personnel
- Supervising at the site
- Conducting evaluations of the event
How many of these activities your business engages in will
depend on the size and type of a particular event, which will,
in turn, depend on the specialization you choose.
Why Do People Hire Event Planners?
This question has a simple answer: Individuals often find
they lack the expertise and time to plan events themselves.
Independent planners can step in and give these special events
the attention they deserve.
Who Becomes An Event Planner?
Planners are often people who got their start in one
particular aspect of special events. Business owner Martin V.K.
had a successful catering company before he decided to plan
entire events. Many other planners have similar stories. This
explains why planners often not only coordinate entire events
but may, in addition, provide one or more services for those
events.
Event planners may also have started out planning events
for other companies before deciding to go into business for
themselves. Joyce B.-W. planned in-house events for a retail
chain for 11 years and then worked for another event planning
company before striking out on her own.
Becoming Certified
Consider getting a degree or certificate from a local
university in event planning or management. A list of colleges
and universities offering educational opportunities in this
field is available from Meeting Professionals International (MPI).
(See the Appendix for contact information.)
Also consider working to become a CSEP (Certified Special
Events Professional) or CMP (Certified Meeting Planner). These
designations are given out by ISES and MPI, respectively. Many
corporations, and some members of the general public, look for
these designations when hiring planners. Because of the
research and study it takes to become a CSEP or CMP, clients
know that these planners are professionals.
More
Start-Up Kits >>
The contents of this Start-Up Kit are excerpted from  How to Start a Home-Based Event Planning Business
Start-Up Guide.
The Corporate Market
Broadly speaking, there are two markets for event planning
services: corporate and social. The term “corporate”
includes not only companies but also charities and nonprofit
organizations. Charities and nonprofit organizations host gala
fundraisers, receptions and athletic competitions, among other
events, to expand their public support base and raise funds.
Thousands of these events occur each year, and although the
large ones require specialized event planning experience, you
may find smaller local events to start out with.
Companies host trade shows, conventions, company picnics,
holiday parties and meetings for staff members, board members
or stockholders. In one year alone, the total number of
meetings held in the United States was almost 1 million, up
83,000 from the previous year, according to a Meetings Market
Report conducted by Market Probe International Inc. for
Meetings
& Conventions magazine. The report also indicated that
in one year alone, there were 797,100 corporate meetings,
10,900 conventions and 175,600 association meetings. The same
report showed that organizations spent a total of $37.4
billion on meetings that same year.
The Social Market
Social events include weddings, birthdays, anniversary
parties, bar and bat mitzvahs, Sweet 16 parties, children’s
parties, reunions and so on. You may decide to handle all
these events or just specialize in one or more of them.
The market for social events, especially birthdays and
anniversaries, is expected to continue to increase over the
next few years, as baby boomers mature. This group has
children getting married, parents celebrating golden
anniversaries, and their own silver wedding anniversaries to
commemorate.
The contents of this Start-Up Kit are excerpted from  How to Start a Home-Based Event Planning Business
Start-Up Guide.
How much money will you need to start your event planning
business? That will depend on the cost of living in the area
your business serves and whether you work from home or rent
office space. It will also depend, to a lesser degree, on your
own taste and lifestyle choices.
Keep in mind that while working from home will keep your
costs low, you can’t start any but the smallest of event
planning business on a shoestring.
This chart lists the start-up costs for two hypothetical
event-planning services. The first business is home-based and
has no employees. The high-end business occupies 500 square
feet of office space. The owner/manager of this business
employs a full-time junior planner and a part-time bookkeeper,
as well as temporary employees who handle clerical work and
who may help prepare for various events. Both owners will
derive their income from pre-tax net profit. Annually, these
businesses will gross $78,000 and $185,000, respectively. The
start-up table lists pre-opening costs for the businesses.
| Start-Up
Expenses |
Low |
High |
| Rent |
$0 |
$2,000 |
| Equipment |
$10,500 |
$18,600 |
| Inventory |
$0 |
$500 |
| Licenses and
Taxes |
$200 |
$300 |
| Phone/Utility
Deposits |
$200 |
$300 |
| Payroll |
$0 |
$3,660 |
| Advertising/Promotion |
$1,200 |
$1,800 |
| Legal Fees &
Accounting |
$600 |
$1,200 |
| Insurance (1st
Quarter) |
$750 |
$1,500 |
| Miscellaneous |
$750 |
$1,500 |
| Total |
$14,200 |
$30,085 |

 Few, if any, event planners have 9-to-5 jobs. By its very
nature, event planning tends to involve evenings, weekends,
holidays and sometimes even specific seasons. How much time
you must commit to working will depend, once again, on the
specialization you choose.
As a general rule, social events involve more weekends and
holidays than corporate events do. Some areas of the country
and some types of events have “on” and “off” seasons.
However, no matter what your specialization (with the
exception of parties for young children), you can count on
working at least some evenings as you coordinate and supervise
events. The planning of those events, however, will be done
mostly during business hours.
Here are the main tasks you’ll be completing as an event
planner:
Research. The best way to reduce risk (whatever the
kind) is to do your homework. For large events, research may
mean making sure there’s a demand for the event by
conducting surveys, interviews or focus group research. If
you’re new to the event planning industry, research may
instead mean finding out all you can about vendors and
suppliers. Research also may mean talking to other planners
who have produced events similar to the one on which you’re
working. Or you may find yourself reading up on issues of
custom and etiquette, especially if you’re unfamiliar with a
particular type of event.
Whatever kind of event you’re planning, research should
include asking your client a lot of questions and writing down
the answers. Interviewing a client may not be what you
immediately think of as research. However, asking too few
questions, or not listening adequately to a client’s
answers, can compromise the success of the event you plan.
- Design. Your creativity comes most into play in
the design phase of event planning, during which you
sketch out the overall “feel” and “look” of the
event. This is the time to brainstorm, either by yourself
or with your employees. It’s also the time to pull out
and look through your idea file. (You do have one, don’t
you? If not, read on and take notes.) Don’t forget to
consult your notebook for the client’s answers to the
questions you asked in the research phase. These
responses, especially the one regarding the event budget,
will help you thoroughly check each idea for feasibility,
preferably before suggesting it to the client.
- Proposal. Once you’ve interviewed the client
and done some preliminary brainstorming, you should have
enough information to prepare a proposal. Be aware that
the production of a proposal is time-consuming and
potentially expensive, especially if you include
photographs or sketches. Sachs points out that only the
larger companies producing high-end events can afford to
provide clients with free proposals. You should receive a
consultation fee (she suggests about $150), which can be
applied toward a client’s event if he or she hires you.
- Organization. During this decision-intensive
phase, you’ll rent the site, hire vendors and take care
of more details than you might believe possible. You’ll
be on the phone until your ear is numb. But before you do
any of this, make sure you have a contact person (either
the client or someone acting on the client’s behalf)
with whom you’ll discuss all major decisions. Having a
designated individual helps ensure that communication
lines are kept open. Also, social events in particular
sometimes suffer from the “too many cooks” syndrome.
Having one designated contact helps you avoid being caught
in the middle of disagreements between event participants.
- Generally speaking, the bigger the event, the more lead
time that’s required to plan it. Major conventions are
planned years in advance. Although you may not be
arranging events on such a grand scale, you do need to
allow at least a few months for events like corporate
picnics, reunions or large parties.
- Coordination. After you’ve made the initial
plans, turn your attention to each of the activities that
form a part of the overall event. At this point, your goal
is to ensure that everyone is on the same wavelength. Good
communication skills are important. Make sure all vendors
have at least a general idea of the overall event
schedule. Even more important, vendors should be clear
about what’s expected of them, and when. Vendor arrival
times should appear in the contracts, but verify those
times anyway. This is a “check and recheck” period.
Make sure all your staff members know their roles.
- Evaluation. The obvious, and in one sense the
most important, test of an event’s success is customer
satisfaction. The goal, of course, is to end up with a
client who will sing your praises up and down the street,
shouting it from rooftops. This is the client who will
hire you again, and who will provide that famous
word-of-mouth advertising for you.
- There are several other ways to evaluate the success of
an event. You can hire an event planning consultant; have
someone who hosts extremely successful parties observe
your event; plan a roundtable post-event discussion with
your employees; obtain feedback from other industry
professionals working at the event, like the caterer or
bartender; or survey guests at or after the event.

The contents of this Start-Up Kit are excerpted from  How to Start a Home-Based Event Planning Business
Start-Up Guide.
The goal in pricing a service is to mark up your labor
and material costs sufficiently to cover overhead expenses
and generate an acceptable profit. First-time business
owners often fail because they unknowingly priced their
services too low. According to industry expert and author
Dr. Joe Goldblatt, fees are typically determined by three
factors:
- Market segment served. Social events have a
different fee structure than corporate events. In the
social events industry, planners typically receive a fee
for their services, plus a percentage of some or all
vendor fees. The two income streams produce enough revenue
for a profit.
-
In the corporate events industry, however, planners
typically charge a fee for their services, plus a handling
charge for each item they contract. For example, a planner
buys flowers from a florist, marks them up (usually 15
percent) and charges that amount to the client. Another
possibility is a flat fee, or “project fee,” often
used when the event is large and the corporation wants to
be given a “not to exceed” figure.
- Geographic location. Fees are higher in the
northeast United States, for example, than in the
southeast. This difference reflects the variation in cost
of living. In addition, areas of the country that have
well-defined on- and off-seasons base their prices partly
on which season they’re in.
- Experience and reputation of the event planner.
If you’re just starting out in the industry, it’s
reasonable to charge less for your planning services while
you gain expertise.
- How, you may ask, are the above-mentioned
fees-for-service calculated? Event planners we interviewed
price their fees-for-service (the total cost to the
client) using a “cost-plus” method. They contract out
the labor, supplies and materials involved in producing an
event and charge their clients a service fee of about 10
to 20 percent of the total cost of the event, with 15
percent being a rough average.
The contents of this Start-Up Kit are excerpted from  How to Start a Home-Based Event Planning Business
Start-Up Guide.
Some new event planners spend hundreds of dollars on
big ads in business magazines or in the Yellow Pages and
wait for the calls to roll in. Dr. Jeff Goldblatt, CSEP,
founding director of the Event Management Program at
George Washington University in Washington, DC, says this
is a mistake: “When was the last time you spent $10,000
on someone in the Yellow Pages?”
Goldblatt advises new entrepreneurs in this industry to
“stay away from the mass market.” While a listing in
the Yellow Pages may help potential clients find you,
spending large amounts of precious advertising dollars
targeting the general public is usually not effective.
New business owner David G. agrees. The problem, he
notes, is that customers need to see what you do, and a
word ad won’t accomplish that. He recommends networking
and making friends in the industry. That way, he says,
“People know you, trust you. They want honesty and
integrity.”
Networking can help your business in two ways. If
people have met you and know what services you offer, they
may refer business to you or use your service themselves.
Furthermore, networking with hotels, caterers and so on
will give you a chance to meet some of the people whose
services you may need as you plan events.
Although networking and word-of-mouth are the most
common industry strategies for acquiring clients,
traditional forms of advertising do have their uses. A
distinctive card or brochure sent to a mailing list or to
local businesses may attract new clients. A small ad in a
local business magazine can help build name recognition. A
Web site on the Internet may allow you to attract
customers unresponsive to other forms of media.
The contents of this Start-Up Kit are excerpted from  How to Start a Home-Based Event Planning Business
Start-Up Guide.
Associations
The contents of this Start-Up Kit are excerpted from  How to Start a Home-Based Event Planning Business
Start-Up Guide.

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