How to Measure Your Event Marketing Success

So how do you know your event was a success? Of course, it’s a bit subjective, though you obviously want to make a net profit after all expenses have been accounted for. You should, however, have a few measurements in place besides the usual, such as raw ticket sale numbers. To gauge the event from different angles, consider the following metrics.

  1. RSVP Numbers
When you create an official event page on Facebook, people should be able to RSVP and reserve their spot. Of course, there will be the usual “going to attend,” “not going to attend,” and “maybe.” Keep track of these numbers and observe how they change as the event date nears. Pay especially close to the “maybes.” How many of those later converted to “going to attend” and “not going to attend”? On event day, you should also compare the number of people that RSVPed vs the number of people that actually showed up at the door. Likewise, how many of the “maybes” ended up showing up after all? If the metrics here reveal lower than anticipated numbers, then perhaps you can make some changes, such as sending the “maybe” people periodic reminders about how awesome the event is going to be and that it’s still not too late to reserve their spot.
  1. The Event Hashtag
First of all, if you’re planning the event and don’t have an event hashtag, then stop what you’re doing right now and create one. The event hashtag will be the core of your event marketing on social media. This article provides a list of free hashtag tracking tools you can use for monitoring how well your hashtag is performing. Social media is pretty much a numbers game, so the more your hashtag is used the more attention it gets, thus allowing it to spread. You can also experiment with several different event hashtags here and analyze their performance side by side. Hashtag tracking should be an ongoing process, keeping tabs of it before, during, and after the event. Did it perform better when the event was in progress or before during the promotional phase?
  1. Pre-Event Engagement
Some of your pre-event promotion may include activities for increasing engagement, such as a social  media contest, a networking event, or a live stream Q&A session. These smaller events provide a good gauge of how well your event might perform. After all, if hardly anyone shows up or tunes in for these, then it might indicate a lack of interest in the main conference. For an online event, don’t just record the total number of people who tuned in. Go a little deeper and measure the total numbers, while breaking it down according to the number of people that tuned in for the whole duration, those that went offline early, and those that jumped in midway through. Also, how many people asked questions vs those that just silently observed?
  1. Post-Event ROI
Measure overall business within a 30-day period or so after the event. Have overall sales increased? If so, what was the ratio of returning customers vs new ones? For the latter, did these people attend your event? Also look at what the sales are coming from? What percentage is from a product or service that was marketed at the event? If you provided any special type of exclusive discount to the guests, what percentage of guests redeemed the offer? Be sure to measure sales patterns. Did sales peak within a day, two days, or a week after the event, and for how long before returning to baseline?
  1. Blog/Vlog engagement
A common event promotion tactic is to hold a series of blog or vlog posts dedicated to the event. These serve as sort of a countdown to build up hype and suspense. Measure how well these posts perform. Measure the total views, shares, comments, and likes vs. dislikes. Also compare performances between posts. Did performance generally increase or decrease as the event date neared? Or did it remain roughly the same? If you used a combination of blogs and vlogs, did one generally performed better than the other? Other measurements include views via mobile vs desktop. If the former performed better, for example, then one improvement remedy is to cater your posts towards mobile users. Finally, be sure to include a call-to-action at the end of each post with a link to the RSVP page. Measure whether RSVPs and ticket sales rose within 24 hours after the blog/vlog was published.
  1. Post-Event Survey
High attendance numbers don’t automatically equate to success. If guests generally found the event to be a letdown, then they are going to be a no-show for future events. Part of the event, after all, is to acquire long-term customers for future events and product purchases. If you wanted to know how your attendees felt about the event, why not just ask them? Post-event surveys should be detailed, asking guests what they liked or disliked about specific parts of the event, such as the main presentation, the workshops, specific tradeshow booths, the catering, the venue, and so on. Don’t take a poor review, though, as a sign of failure. Instead, see it as valuable data, or constructive criticism on how future events can be improved. When you gauge an event using multiple key performance indicators, you will begin to see patterns and trends regarding attendee behavior. With the revelation, you will know what the next steps are for improving future events.   About the Author: Dan McCarthy is an Event Manager at Ultimate Experience, an event management company based in the UK. Dan has 5 years of event project management under his belt. He has worked on many successful events, and currently he shares his knowledge by writing on the company blog. Follow him on Twitter @DanCarthy2.]]]]> ]]>

How to Preserve Customers While Growing Event Business

Meet Customer Expectations with a great team: Your event organisation must have a team that is aware of how to build these customer relationships, and skilled in many disciplines. They must have good critical thinking skills and be able to adapt to changing technologies, understand customer expectations, and be able navigate the business culture and have the knowledge to be able to exploit all event marketing tools. Listening To Your Customers: Clients will tell you volumes, if you’ll only listen. Train your employees to be interrogators (in the best possible sense, of course!). Ask your existing customers what they loved about events they’ve been to or their favorite part of the last event you organized for them. Simply engaging them in conversation about them will net you all the information you need to better your events and services customer treatment. As important as listening is, make sure you “hear” what clients say. Make changes and alterations where you feel it is warranted. A customer that sees their suggestions implemented is one with a stake in your business. Concentrate and capitalise on these human emotions. Reward Your Best Customers: Not all customers are created equal. Some will try to get you to give them the sky for free, while others are more than happy to pay good money to be treated well. Value cannot be overrated. When you find customers that are loyal and return over and over to your business, find ways to reward their loyalty. A little hidden secret about this tip is that happy, loyal, well-cared-for “insider” customers can be one of the best new client acquisition tools. These folks tell their friends. Be Professional Yet Have Fun: Obviously this tip will vary depending upon the type of Event organisation you operate, however, the principle is still relatively universal. While being professional and helpful to your clients, the simple act of putting a smile on your face can lighten the mood and make an otherwise unmemorable interaction one that not only gets remembered but gets spread around to others likely to get in contact for event management. Lending back to your team, Event Managers must always be personable and able to talk and gel with anyone; relationship building skills are imperative and priceless! Keep Current (With What Matters to Your Customers): Technology continues to accelerate and it’s important to keep up with what’s new and popular with customers. New smart event devices; such as apps and all round delegate management systems, new hot off the press venues, new event trends they are inspired by, new ways to be heard, and new social channels. Sometimes it seems improbable that you could keep up, but if you try to relate to your customers and see what is interesting to them, you’ll have a better way to decide what to concentrate on. A good example recently is Pinterest. It blew onto the scene suddenly, has grown exponentially, morphed from its original uses into a broader tool for businesses, and is beloved for its visual emphasis. Don’t let these kinds of opportunities elude you just because the value isn’t immediately apparent. Keep reading. Keep watching. Keep listening. Consider Complaints a Gift: This is easy to say but, of course, hard to do. Remember, whether the customer is right or wrong, and even on days when you deal with complaints that are unreasonable, the way you handle them can demonstrate to customers that you are committed to delivering the best event management service. Complaints are an opportunity to improve your skills and up your game.     Author Bio: Sarah Hill is a professional blogger and creative content writer. She works as a Marketing Manager Group Se7en Events. Group Se7en Events is a leading event planning & event management agency in London, delivering global meeting and free venue finding service. ]]]]> ]]>

How to Use Instagram for Marketing Your Event

fastest growing social network? 26% of the adult population is already using it. That’s a huge audience of potential ticket buyers. Instagram is the perfect marketing channel for events. The reason being that events are told best through pictures. Just take a look at your Instagram feed. Scrolling through photos you see friends at concerts, bars, holiday parties…you name it. It’s now second nature for people to post about their experiences. Instagram just happens to be the best place to do it. In this post, I’ll walk through the steps on how to use Instagram for marketing your event. I’ll go over how to get started, what kind of content to create, and how to build your audience. Let’s get rocking.

Getting Started

So the first thing you’ll want to do is create a new account. Be smart about this. Creating an account for a large festival or conference makes sense. If that isn’t you, create an Instagram account for your organization. This avoids pigeonholing yourself in building your audience from just one small event. After creating your account, Instagram asks you to connect to Facebook. Go ahead and connect if you already have a large Facebook fanbase. By connecting, all your Facebook followers will get notified that you joined Instagram. It’s an easy way to build your initial audience. Now let’s dress up your profile page. Think of your profile as a landing page for potential ticket buyers. This is where your event either makes a great first impression or fades away from memory. You want to show off your event both through the copy and your images. Let’s take a look at the example below: using instagram for marketing                               BLINK Conference does a pretty solid job here. I know exactly what the conference is, when it happens, and how to find more info. Their bio link goes to a Facebook community page which works fine. If your tickets are on sale, do  link to your ticketing page. Use an aggressive call to action like “Grab early bird tickets before they run out” to get the point across. The profile also has some photos that make me want to explore the account. This is key. If your account doesn’t have any activity, visitor won’t follow you back.

Content Creation

Before using Instagram for marketing, you need to get in the flow of publishing awesome photos. Luckily it’s pretty easy to do. That’s why people use Instagram in the first place. Before diving into what to publish, let’s look at 2 apps that will help you create high quality photos. Canva: This is my go-to tool for graphic design. I’m not a designer myself so Canva is a godsend. You don’t need to know Photoshop. Just click and drag to edit photos and overlay text. PicLab: Similar to Canva but designed for the smartphone. So for event planners on the go, PicLab makes it possible to quickly snap a pic and drop some text over it. OK so you got your apps. Now what do you post? Here’s a list that should give you some ideas: conf                               marketing on instagram                               how to use instagram for marketing                               instagram for marketing                               attendee                               Along with creating some beautiful imagery, also take advantage of the post description. Write compelling and engaging text. Ask questions and get followers to tag their friends. A neat trick is to include a CTA that asks your followers to Double Tap. By double tapping, they’ll like the photo. After you’ve come up with some ideas, the next question is how often should you post? To make headway, I recommend posting 1-2 times per day. This makes it manageable and avoids being too spammy. This article recommends posting between 5-6pm on weekdays. Our infographic on social media for events is also a solid resource for when and what to post. Let’s move to the most exciting part: growing your audience!

Building Your Audience

Account Engagement

To use Instagram for marketing, you need to identify your event’s target audience. Easiest place to start is location. Let’s say we’re planning a bacon festival in Austin, Texas. I’ll head over to Instagram’s and search #atx under the tags column. #atx is a pretty popular hashtag used by Austinites. how to use instagram for marketing your event                               When I search the hashtag, Instagram shows the most popular ones. The 4th one down is #atxeats. That looks promising! While there’s a couple other hashtags, lets dive into this one as it’s a bit more targeted to our festival. After tapping on the hashtag, I see a ton of foodie posts. I can make an assumption that people using that hashtag might be interested in attending my bacon festival. How do I engage with them? Start by using the Follow, Like, Like, Like strategy. This link talks about the process in more detail. What you want to do is find the top pictures under the #atxeats hashtag and follow those accounts. Then, like 3 of their photos. The account will then get a stream of notifications from you following and liking their stuff. If they’re interested in what they see, there’s a good chance they’ll follow you back. Now this process is a bit manual but you can use a tool called Instagress to automate it. Instagress allows you to put your follows and likes on autopilot. It’ll save you a lot of time in the long run. Along with this strategy, you can start using these targeted hashtags in your own photos. By doing this, your account will start showing up in these searches as well. An important note is that if you’re going to load up an image with hashtags, do so in the comments. This way your photo description won’t look spammy.

Contests

Contests work especially well for marketing on Instagram. A solid tactic is organizing contests where the winner gets a couple free tickets. I recommend using Gleam.io for running your contest. It makes contests super easy to run. Instagram’s photo mentioning is what makes contests work. A photo mention is when someone comments on your photo by mentioning a friend as seen below: event-marketing-strategies                     When this happens, Instagram notifies the friend of the mention. The friend will then typically click on the photo to check it out. For contests, direct people to tag their friend on one of your photos to enter. This is where the network effects come into play. As your photo mentions build up, your exposure increases. You can also create entries that have people follow your account or like a post. What makes ticket giveaway contests awesome is that you’re capturing buyer’s intent. All your contest entries are showing interest in attending your event. Click here to view our slideshare about contests and other social media tactics.

Shoutouts

Our last growth tactic for how to use Instagram for marketing your event comes in the form of a shoutout. A shoutout is a post on another Instagram account that encourages that account’s followers to follow you. For an event, I recommend researching influencers in your city. City influencers can be publications, restaurants, or just ordinary people. Going back to the bacon festival example, I’ll search for something like “Austin Magazine”: how to use instagram for marketing                               Now I have a couple local publications I can reach out to for a shoutout. You’ll want the account to share an image and caption that you curate yourself. At least get them to mention your event in one of their photos. To help sweeten the deal, communicate to them that you’ll return the favor by giving them a shoutout. This way they can get exposure to your audience as well. The shoutout tactic also works for influencers that are relevant to your event type. As you build your audience, it’s also important to create your own hashtag for the event. The power of having an event hashtag is that attendees can tag their own photos with your hashtag. This not only helps increase your reach but gives you more photos to publish into your feed. It’s a no brainer to try marketing on Instagram for your event. The platform is still young so there’s a lot of untapped opportunity. Try testing out these tactics and see what works best for you. Every event is different. Be creative in your Instagram marketing to stand out from the rest of the pack.]]]]> ]]>

Sell tickets on Weebly with Ticketbud

Ticketbud lets you embed a widget allowing you to sell tickets directly from your Weebly site to any event you create. Once you have created an event on Ticketbud, we provide you with a simple snippet of code that you copy and paste directly into your website. This widget will style according to the design of your website and will get your ticket sales up and running instantly! Please see the gif below on how to get started: Or follow these instructions to get started: 1. Go to Ticketbud.com, sign up/sign in and select the big pink “create event” button 2.Fill in the basic information of your event (the time, date, name and location) 3.Click on edit, and add some tickets that you would like to sell. (You can also edit your event page that attendees can visit also but it is not required to have ticketing on Weebly) 4. Click Manage and go to the “Widget” tab. 5. Copy the snippet of code to the right of the page 6. Go to your Weebly account and press edit on the website you would like to add ticketing. 7. Go to the page you would like to add ticketing. Scroll down on the left hand menu to find embed code. Drag this onto the area you would like on your page. Copy the snippet of code into the form. 8. TADA! You are all set up to sell tickets on your own Weebly website Below is the help article from Weebly showing you how to upload a script using a code block. Simply copy the snippet of code provided in Ticketbud and follow the instructions to paste in the appropriate section of your website.

Sell tickets on Weebly using Ticketbud! Use Ticketbud to take care of organizing promotions and managing attendees. If you need any help getting this set up, please contact cs@ticketbud.com or give us a call at 844-376-6061]]]]> ]]>

Sell tickets on Wix using Ticketbud

Ticketbud lets you embed a widget allowing you to sell tickets directly from your Wix site. Once you have created an event on Ticketbud, we provide you with a simple snippet of code that you copy and paste directly into your website. This widget will style according to the design of your website and will get your ticket sales up and running instantly! iPlease see the gif below on how to get started: Or follow these instructions to get started: 1. Go to Ticketbud.com, sign up/sign in and select the big pink “create event” button 2.Fill in the basic information of your event (the time, date, name and location) 3.Click on edit, and add some tickets that you would like to sell. (You can also edit your event page that attendees can visit also but it is not required to have ticketing on Wix) 4. Click Manage and go to the “Widget” tab. 5. Copy the snippet of code to the right of the page 6. Go to your Wix account and press edit site on the website you would like to add ticketing. 7. Press the add button and scroll down to apps. Select HTML and change Insert URL to Insert HTML. Paste the widget code you copied from Ticketbud and press update. 8. TADA! You are all set up to sell tickets on your own Wix website Sell tickets on Wix using Ticketbud! Use Ticketbud to take care of organizing promotions and managing attendees. If you need any help getting this set up, please contact cs@ticketbud.com or give us a call at 844-376-6061]]]]> ]]>

Sell tickets on Squarespace using Ticketbud

Ticketbud lets you embed a widget allowing you to sell tickets directly from your Squarespace site (and you can even use Stripe to process payments). Once you have created an event on Ticketbud, we provide you with a simple snippet of code that you copy and paste directly into your website. This widget will style according to the design of your website and will get your ticket sales up and running instantly!

Or follow these instructions to get started:

  1. Go to Ticketbud.com, sign up/sign in and select the big pink “create event” button
  2. Fill in the basic information of your event (the time, date, name and location)
  3. Click on edit, and add some tickets that you would like to sell. (You can also edit your event page that attendees can visit also but it is not required to have ticketing on Squarespace)
  4. Click Manage and go to the “Widget” tab.
  5. Copy the snippet of code to the right of the page
  6. Go to your Squarespace account where you can edit your website.
  7. Add a code block and paste in the code for the widget
  8. TADA!

You are all set up to sell tickets on your own Squarespace website Below is the help article from Squarespace showing you how to upload a script using a code block. Simply copy the snippet of code provided in Ticketbud and follow the instructions to paste in the appropriate section of your website.

Sell tickets on Squarespace using Ticketbud! Use Ticketbud to take care of organizing promotions and managing attendees. If you need any help getting this set up, please contact cs@ticketbud.com or give us a call at 844-376-6061

7 Social Media Missteps Events Make (& how to avoid them)

troll you just for the fun of it. Should any of these online perils stop you from using social media for your event? Absolutely, positively NOT! Missteps are a part of the event planning experience and, as I like to tell organizers, if you’re not making, at least, a few mistakes you’re not trying hard enough. To help you avoid some of the most common social media snafus, I’ve put together a nice and neat list of 7 social media missteps I see organizers make and, most importantly, how to avoid them entirely. Lets get started…

1. Going Hashtag Crazy

Hashtags are a great tool to use for your event. They provide an easy way to find relevant tweets and give you and your attendees an effective way to communicate on a massively popular social media platform. That being said, going overboard with your hashtag usage can be just as detrimental as using it properly can be beneficial. As a general rule of thumb, avoid using more than 2 hashtags per tweet to avoid confusing attendees and diluting the effectiveness of the hashtags you do use. I also recommend choosing one hashtag that is specific to your event (ie – #BensComicCon14) and another that is much broader and more widely used. This way you have one hashtag your attendees can use to discuss your event  and another that can spark better engagement from a big pool of Twitter users.

2. Not Having Someone Primarily Focused on Social Media

Many organizers think they can organize an entire event AND manage the social media before, during and after. Think again! Handling an event’s social media is a big undertaking that requires constant attention and quick responses to attendees, sponsors and more. A good social media coordinator not only placates upset attendees and avoid rookie social media blunders, but also actively participates in conversations online and even helps drive ticket sales. Whether you hire a professional or just use someone from your existing team, dedicating someone to manage your event’s social media is one steps you can take to avoid unnecessary social media blunders.

3. Ignoring The Bad

Inevitably, your event is going to receive some negative comments on social media. While receiving unfavorable comments isn’t great, what’s worse is refusing to even acknowledge them. Ignoring one bad piece of feedback on social media only causes the ill sentiments to grow and spread until, before you realize it, you have a chorus of angry attendees demanding a response (and by that point nothing you say will not be a good enough answer). Before your event even starts, go over how you will respond to negative feedback, both online and at the event, and then, when the time comes, respond swiftly.

4. Soliciting Attendees To Promote Your Event

Let me first say that politely or innocuously asking attendees to share info about your event is not ALWAYS a negative thing. If fact, when you provide value in doing so (a discount, free gift, etc), asking attendees to promote is a powerful marketing tool. Soliciting or begging for promotion, on the other, is an absolute no-no. It provides no value to the attendee and cheapens your brand. I advise organizers to rarely ask for promotion from their attendees. Instead, focus on making your event so awesome your attendees won’t need any provocation to promote and spread the buzz.

5. Not Using The Channels Your Attendees Use

While Facebook and Twitter are considered the “must use” social media channels for events, if your attendees or target attendees are on a different kind of social media, you should be too. The burden of information is not on your guests to receive the information about your event, but on YOU to provide it in the most convenient way. Ask attendees from a previous event what social media they use or do some research on common channels for a certain type of event. The easier and more comfortable you can make the communication process on social media, the more confidence your guests will have in purchasing a ticket.

6. The “One-and-done” Post

A “one-and-done” post, as the name suggests, is content that is shared once and then never referenced or re-posted again. Most often, I see organizers do this because they’re worried posting too much about the same thing will annoy their attendees. Let me assuage your fears right now: not only is it okay to post multiple times about one thing, I highly recommend it! The shelf life of a post is relatively short and social media users check their accounts sporadically. This means the third time you post about your event’s new speaker might actually be the first time an attendee actually sees and reads it. I frequently use the acronym ICYMI (In Case You Missed It) before repeat posts to alert the user that this post has been posted before and that I believe it’s something they really need to check out.

7. Not Making Your Tweets “Retweetable”

When someone retweets something you shared, their handle appears in the tweet along with the message you originally sent. If you used too many characters (the maximum amount is 140) in your original tweet, the addition of the retweeters handle cause parts to be cut off and your message will be incomplete. This is one of the most common missteps but, fortunately, also one of the easiest to correct. All you need to do is simply be sure to leave some space in your tweets for others to retweet. A good rule of thumb is to leave 8-12 characters of space. Do this and retweeters should have no problem sharing your full message.    ]]]]> ]]>

5 Reasons why SXSW is the best festival in the world

It’s almost that time for thousands of people to descend upon the capital city of Texas. That time where a city shuts itself down in the name of art, technology and culture for self made festival that has grown into one of the most well known in the world.

South By Southwest (SXSW) is set to take over the streets of Austin once again, beginning March, 7th. This ever expanding 10 day festival covers all the latest and greatest in film, tech, comedy, music and more drawing thousands of people from all over the globe.

People who have never experienced SXSW may think; “it’s just another typical festival, just like the other millions that happen every year”. But boy are they wrong! Here are 5 reasons why SXSW is the best festival on the planet:

 1. SXSW brings in the biggest, brightest and most innovative people in the world In previous years, SXSW Interactive key-note speakers have included Al Gore, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Sean Parker. Pretty well known names huh? Well that’s only the interactive portion of ‘South-By’.

Mark Zuckerberg speaking at SXSW in 2008

SXSW brings the best musicians from all over the world too. With over 2,000 bands performing in a 10-day period, it is hard to be disappointed. In 2013 some of the biggest acts included Justin Timberlake, Usher and Prince. With thousands of “breakout” bands also in the act, SXSW is a goldmine of musical talent. We haven’t even mentioned the film portion but need I say more?

2. Everything is free (if you know how to do it)

Many SXSW veterans will tell you, “don’t purchase that SXSW badge”. While it may help to buy one to get into some of the more “prestigious” events like keynote speakers, there are plenty of free events to go round.  These events have free food, drinks, entertainment and goodies to hand out and take place all week. You’ll find these concerts, events and parties all over Austin. Just keep your eyes and ears peeled and you won’t spend a dime during the festival. (HINT HINT) – Check out these awesome peeps if you want more information on all the parties and events going on during the festival:

3. Festivals within the festival

What other festivals can proclaim to have “mini” festivals within their own festival? While events like Fader Fort and The MtvU Woodie Awards at last year’s SXSW are seen as “unofficial” events and are in no way related with SXSW, these events rake in visitors with the promise of free beer, awesome food, sponsored goodies and a great time. Just be sure to get those wristbands!

Fader Fort sponsored by Converse in 2013

4. Only in Austin, TX.

What other major metropolitan city can say it shuts down for a festival? The dynamics of the city completely change during the 10-day span. With hundreds of events taking place day and night, college students on spring break and a mass influx of tourists and business people coming into town, SXSW makes Austin a 24/7 party mixed full of culture and experiences.

Everywhere you turn, there is something going on.

5. The Combo

SXSW is a week full of fun, culture and events. The combination of music, interactive and film make for a festival that is unmatched in content. Festivals are usually geared towards one specific category, but three “genres” mixed into one week of madness make for one of the biggest, brightest and best festivals on the planet.

Coming into Austin for SXSW? Tweet us @Ticketbud and let us know what your plans are and lets grab a beer (probably free!)

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Victor Manuelle in Calgary

Get Tickets: Victor Manuelle in Calgary

Event Location: 1010 42 Ave SE, Calgary AB, T2G 1Z4
When: Saturday April 21 2012 8:00pm
Hosted by: Latin Sound Productions
Learn more, view map & buy tickets

Ladies & Gentlemen…LATIN SOUND PRODUCTIONS in collaboration with CASA MEXICO IN ALBERTA FOUNDATION are proud to present for the first time in Calgary…VICTOR MANUELLE directly from Puerto Rico LIVE @ CENTURY CASINO CALGARY. Don’t miss the opportunity to see one of the few Salsa singers that has managed to dominate every BILLBOARD LATIN Chart.

His new single “Si Tú Me Besas” reached the number one position on the Tropical Songs chart, but also managed t…

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Spring Dinner 2012

Get Tickets: Spring Dinner 2012

Event Location: Women’s Community Building, 100 W. Seneca St, Ithaca, NY 14850
When: Saturday April 7 2012 6:00pm
Hosted by: Asha Cornell
Learn more, view map & buy tickets

A student-cooked vegetarian meal from appetizers to desserts/

Date: Saturday, April 7th, 2012 Time:

Dallas Builders School with Randy Godfrey

Get Tickets: Dallas Builders School with Randy Godfrey

Event Location: 9330 N. Central Expressway Dallas, TX
When: Saturday June 16 2012 8:20am
Hosted by: Primerica Dallas
Learn more, view map & buy tickets

Dallas Builders School – June 16, 2012

Special Guest Speaker – Randy Godfrey

Tickets: Early Bird Pricing Until April 21st

General Admission/ Guest – $12  (price goes up to $15 on April 22nd)

RVP+Partner – $50 (price goe…

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To Gather Fest

Get Tickets: To Gather Fest

Event Location: 227 Sandy Springs Pl NE suite 416, Atlanta, GA 30328
When: Sunday June 3 2012 12:00pm
Hosted by: McNary Entertainment
Learn more, view map & buy tickets

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