Getting Bigger Budgets for Event Marketing Dallas TX

Find out ways to get more spending for more aggressive event marketing campaigns. Here are some tips for getting the budget you need and want to market your special event.

Local Companies

Vivids Event Planning & Design
972.325.4775
PO Box 823136
Dallas, TX
Funtime Magical Party Rentals
214-440-8229
2131 Volga
Dallas, TX
Rebecca Hackl Events
972-355-6556
200 S Belt Line Rd, Suite 100
Irving, TX
Global Events
214-361-4166
12225 Greenville ave suite 800
Dallas, TX
Big D Event Rentals
214-325-9396
4320 Sunbelt Drive
Addison, TX
Saturn Plastics Corp
(972) 487-8017
3625 Dividend Dr
Garland, TX
Art Sign Neon
(972) 272-0501
3108 Benton St
Garland, TX
Garland Convention & Reception Center
(972) 278-3050
1906 E Miller Rd
Garland, TX
Steak and Ale Restaurants
(972) 864-1500
1957 Northwest Hwy
Garland, TX
Shabang Exhibits Inc
(214) 343-2854
4002 W Miller Rd
Garland, TX

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1. Prove Your Success
"Looking to get more money for an event program is like asking for more allowance before you've done your chores," says Allison Saget, author of The Event Marketing Handbook: Beyond Logistics & Planning (Kaplan Publishing, 2006). But presenting compelling data that shows an event's return on investment can help you make your argument. Just ask CareerBuilder.com. Last year, the Chicago company worked with Swivel Media to produce a six-month, 43-city mobile marketing tour so successful that the company is not only doing it again this year, but expanding it. Company executives created several different ways to track Web activity that originated from the tour, including taking photos of event attendees at each stop and giving them a code that allowed them to retrieve the photo from the Web site; Careerbuilder.com then tracked how many people entered their code. "Presenting the data was the best way for us to increase our resources and make our case," says Andrea Winitsky, the company's event marketing manager.

2. Tell a Story
While the numbers can be important, don't rely solely on them to make your argument. Instead, to get the OK to do more or bigger events, author and marketing guru Seth Godin recommends selling the story behind them. "When your boss asks you to justify the ROI, if you engage in that conversation you're walking into a sucker's bet," he says. "What they're really saying is, 'It makes me nervous to invest in this, so tell me a story that won't make me nervous.'" How to do that? "Pick someone who just became a customer, or became a world-class employee, and talk in detail about their value—and then talk in detail about how the event you created caused that to happen," he says.


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Featured Local Company

Vivids Event Planning & Design

972.325.4775
PO Box 823136
Dallas, TX