An event without a marketing plan is a venue booking. This guide gives you the complete event marketing plan template — with timeline, channel strategy, budget allocation, and KPIs — that professional event marketers use to fill seats and build lasting audiences in Canada.
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Generate My Marketing Plan →The 4-Phase Event Marketing Timeline
Event marketing follows a predictable rhythm. Most successful events allocate marketing effort roughly as follows: 30% in the early announcement phase, 20% in the middle build, 30% in the final push, and 20% post-event for community building and retention.
Phase 1: Announcement (8–12 Weeks Out)
The goal of Phase 1 is awareness — getting the event on people's radars so they can plan around the date. At this stage, you are not selling tickets; you are creating interest.
- Launch event website with date, location, and registration link
- Send save-the-date to your full email list
- Create event social media profiles and pages
- Issue first press release to local and industry media
- Announce first confirmed speakers or performers
- Open early bird registration (20–30% discount to drive early commits)
Phase 2: Build (4–8 Weeks Out)
Phase 2 is momentum. Each week should bring a new announcement, testimonial, or social proof element that gives prospective attendees a reason to register today rather than waiting.
- Announce full speaker/performer lineup
- Publish sponsor announcements (create social proof)
- Release event agenda or schedule
- Begin paid advertising targeting your audience demographics
- Send 2–3 email newsletters with event content
- Launch influencer or ambassador partnerships
- Issue second press release with program highlights
Phase 3: Final Push (1–3 Weeks Out)
The final push is your highest-intensity marketing period. This is when FOMO (fear of missing out) and deadline pressure drive the majority of last-minute registrations.
- Ramp social media to daily posts
- Launch "last chance" email sequence (3 emails in final week)
- Run countdown timer on event website
- Share attendee testimonials and social proof
- Increase paid advertising spend and retarget website visitors
- Go live on social media with behind-the-scenes prep content
- Send reminder to everyone who registered but has not paid
Phase 4: Post-Event (0–4 Weeks After)
Post-event marketing is where most event teams stop investing — and where the highest return on effort lives. This phase converts one-time attendees into long-term community members and gives your next event a head start.
- Send thank-you email within 48 hours
- Share event photos and highlight reel within 1 week
- Publish an event recap blog post
- Release recorded sessions or content (if applicable)
- Announce next edition dates (if recurring)
Event Marketing Budget Allocation
How you allocate your marketing budget depends on your event type and audience. Here is a recommended allocation framework for a mid-size Canadian event ($3,000–$10,000 marketing budget):
- Paid Social Advertising (35%): Facebook/Instagram and LinkedIn ads targeting your specific demographic in your geographic area. Lookalike audiences from past attendees outperform cold targeting.
- Content and Design (20%): Professional photography, graphic design for social assets, video production for announcements or trailers. Underinvesting here hurts credibility.
- Email Marketing Tools (10%): Platform costs, email design, list segmentation. Email remains the highest-ROI channel for event marketing.
- PR and Media (15%): Press release distribution, media outreach, journalist and blogger partnerships. Local media coverage dramatically reduces your paid ad spend requirements.
- Influencer and Partner Marketing (10%): Paid or gifted partnerships with micro-influencers (5,000–50,000 followers) in your niche often outperform national influencers for local events.
- Contingency (10%): Always reserve for last-minute pushes or unexpected opportunities (a relevant hashtag trending, a speaker tweet that goes viral).
Event Marketing KPIs to Track
Set your KPIs before you start marketing — not after. Post-hoc KPIs are rationalised, not measured. Core metrics for event marketing:
- Registration rate: Registrations ÷ Website visitors (benchmark: 5–15% conversion rate)
- Email open rate: Industry benchmark for events is 22–28%
- Cost per registration: Total marketing spend ÷ Registrations (track weekly — rising CPR is a warning sign)
- Social media reach: Total unique accounts reached across all platforms
- Ticket revenue pacing: Track weekly against your target to identify if you need to accelerate promotion
- Net Promoter Score (NPS): Post-event survey metric; benchmark for excellent events is NPS 50+
Frequently Asked Questions
Which social media platform works best for event marketing in Canada?
It depends on your audience. For consumer events (food, music, community): Instagram and Facebook. For professional and B2B events (conferences, trade shows): LinkedIn. For youth-oriented events: TikTok. In Canada specifically, Facebook still has significant reach among the 35–55 demographic that holds most corporate sponsorship budgets.
How early should I launch event marketing?
For events requiring travel or accommodation: 6–9 months. For local professional events: 8–12 weeks. For community events and workshops: 4–6 weeks. Earlier is generally better — the biggest mistake is starting too late, not too early.