Event Marketing: How to Successfully Promote Events, Festivals, Conventions, and Expositions

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86 Chapter 4 Funding the Event Marketing Program


manipulate your budget to cover expense overages or revenue
shortfalls. A budget is fluid, but the adjustments should be made
after careful analysis of the entire project.
To help in this analysis and in developing specific budget
points for the marketing activities, there are some basic ideas that
must be kept in mind initially. First, and foremost, everything has
a price attached. Although this premise may sound elementary, it
is often the small financial details that are overlooked that will
have a huge impact on your marketing activities. Forgetting the
price of postage to mail your 5,000 invitations can quickly erode
any profit margin. Price doesn’t necessarily have to be a monetary
outlay; it could be an in-kind contribution or a barter/trade-out.
Regardless of the type of transaction, the price has a value associ-
ated with it that impacts your budget on both the revenue and the
expense sides.
The other two basic ideas to keep in mind while developing a
budget are equally important to one another: price and cost. As
you develop your budget, remember that priceis the value placed
on a good or service, while costis what you sacrifice in the future
by paying the price for a good or service today. An example would
be if an organization pays $5,000.00 (the price) for a one-time print
advertisement for an event, which may render the cost as insuffi-
cient funds to pay for radio spots in the future.
When developing the event marketing budget, there are several
major financial categories to consider:

■Advertising
■Printing
■Postage
■Public relations
■Auxiliary opportunities
■Promotional printing

Each of these categories can, in turn, have many components, as
shown in Figure 4-1. As you can see in Figure 4-1, there is over-
lap in the budget subcategories; several of the categories have
postage and creative expenses related to them. To help identify
these expenses, it is important that each category be assigned its
own account code. Figure 4-2 helps clarify expenses in terms of
category and type.
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