
How to Book a Venue for an Event: 7 Top Tips
Booking a venue for an event means more than finding a room that’s available. It involves choosing a location that supports your goals, suits your audience, fits your budget and matches the tone of your event. A well chosen venue enhances the attendee experience, minimises logistical stress and provides the right backdrop for your content and interactions.
This guide explains key factors to consider when booking a venue and offers practical advice to help you make confident choices that improve your event outcomes.
Tips for Booking an Event Venue
By following these seven tips for booking an event venue, you’ll stand the best chance of ensuring that your event goes off without a hitch.
1. Match the venue to the event
Before considering any venue, you must first decide the type of event you want to hold, you’ll need to have an accurate estimate of numbers expected to attend and you’ll need to know what you have to spend. Venue size is crucial: too small and the participants will feel uncomfortable, too big and it will feel empty unless you are prepared to decorate the premises to disguise the unused space. You may also need to have rooms available for small group meetings.
You’ll also want the venue to be appropriate for your event. For example, if you’re a promoting a hi-tech business you’ll probably want a to be in modern surroundings rather than an ancient hall. For the best outcome, the event has to be in a location that has, or can be adapted to create, the atmosphere that you want.
2. Accomodation
When planning an event, ensuring the venue’s accommodation aligns with your needs is essential. Collaborate with the venue manager to address the following:
- Guest Requirements: Does the venue require any pre-arrival documentation or forms from attendees?
- Peak Time Management: How does the venue handle busy periods, such as check-ins, meal times, or group activities, to ensure a smooth flow of guests?
- Contingency Planning: Is there a designated area or process for assisting guests who may require support during their stay?
- Setup and Access: What are the access times for setting up and breaking down your event, and are there restrictions on equipment or materials?
- Promotions and Displays: What promotional activities and displays are allowed in shared spaces, and are there any specific guidelines to follow?
- Safety and Staffing: Are adequate staffing and security measures provided to ensure guest comfort and event success?
Thoroughly reviewing these details with the venue will help ensure the accommodation supports a seamless and professional event experience for all attendees.
3. Create an Unforgettable Experience
Naturally visiting the venue in person is the best way to judge the suitability of an event. You’ll be able to check the size and layout of the rooms, the type of lighting available and the acoustics and to check the décor and cleanliness.
As you begin to visit venues or use their online digital experience to assess their suitability, it’s important to consider the attendee experience that you want to create. It’s likely your attendees will be cautious at first in attending events in this new normal, so you’ll want to create an awe factor which will ensure the content delivered lingers long in the memory. In short, as soon as they arrive at the venue you’ll want them to feel at ease and relaxed, ready for an invigorating day ahead.
A site visit will allow you to assess potential problems - if kitchen noise or traffic noise is likely to be an issue, for example. Or, if others are using the venue you’ll need to establish if there is any possibility of a clash or interference.
Just as important as the venue itself is the location and surroundings. You’ll need to make sure that it is easily accessible and that there is adequate parking or suitable public transport options for guests.
4. Modified layouts provide opportunities
Talk to the venue manager on how best to structure the room layout to allow for social distancing. While seating is an obvious pre-requisite, think about how you can use the one-way systems and traffic flow within the venue to enhance the experience. This can everything from floral decorations and company branding to digital touchpoints accessed via QR codes. This is the perfect excuse to get creative!
5. Check audio-visual facilities
With this point we again come back to that phrase, ‘the attendee experience’. Depending on your event, you’ll almost certainly need audio-visual facilities. You should therefore check what microphone systems the venue has (and test them for clarity and effectiveness) and establish if it has projection facilities, screens, monitors and so on. If Internet access is important, then you’ll also need to make sure that it is available and meets your requirements.
It's likely you’ll want to record the sessions during the day to create a highlights package to send to attendees post event. Or, you may need to live stream the event to those who are unable to attend. Therefore you’ll want to know where the recording equipment can be set up, how it’ll look on screen and deliver a digital experience which makes the attendee feel like they were in the seats.
6. Catering options
Social distancing regulations may give event organisers an opportunity to provide more structured networking catering breaks into the agenda. This is something to raise with your venue manager, but again we’ll stress the opportunity to do something creative and different to elevate the attendee experience. Can you create a personalised food menu experience for the delegates? Is there a theme you can match to the day? Are you making sure you’re catering for all diets? And finally, is the food menu conducive for a productive day or will it leave your attendees in a post 2pm slumber?
7. Budget
To end of course is the budget. We all know budgeting for an event can be tricky and there are multiple costs to consider, including;
- Hiring of the venue.
- Equipment rental.
- Advertising and promotion, including giveaways.
- Extra facilities – WiFi, office services and so on.
- Guest speakers .
- Catering.
When the budget starts to grow beyond it’s limits, that is your moment to shine. Think creatively. What can be stripped back? What won’t an attendee notice? And what is imperative to ensure the content and messages delivered live long in the memory post event?
How to Match a Venue to Your Event Purpose and Audience
Choosing a venue is not just about space and cost. The best outcomes come when the space matches what you intend your event to feel and achieve. Here are five aspects to think about when aligning venue choice with event intent.
1. Clarify the event purpose before searching
Before you look at options, be clear about why you’re holding the event and what you want people to take away. Are you building connections, learning new skills, celebrating achievement or launching a new product? Your purpose shapes the environment that will support it.
2. Think about audience expectations
Different audiences respond to different environments. Professional groups often expect formal or modern spaces that feel comfortable and functional. Creative or social events may benefit from unique spaces that feel warm or inspiring. Think about what will make attendees feel welcome and open to engagement.
3. Consider how the space affects interaction
The layout of a venue influences how people connect. A room with a round table layout encourages group discussion, while a theatre style room supports presentation and focus. Choose a layout that supports the type of interaction you want to encourage.
4. Check sight lines and acoustics
A good space lets every attendee see and hear clearly. Bad sight lines or muffled sound reduce engagement and can make even the best content hard to absorb. Walk the space or request a tour to test visibility and sound quality.
5. Review the flow of arrival, break and exit moments
A strong experience considers how people move through the venue. Easy access to entrances, bathrooms, break areas and refreshment spaces helps events feel smooth rather than congested or stressful. Think about the whole journey from arrival to departure.
By evaluating a venue not just by size and cost but by how it supports purpose, audience needs and interaction, you make choices that improve the impact of your event.
For further information or to book one of our speakers, call us on +44 (0)20 7607 7070 or email info@speakerscorner.co.uk .
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Frequently Asked Questions
Start by defining the event purpose, expected number of attendees, and the type of experience you want to create. These help you filter venue options before you look at availability or cost.
Choose a space that feels full but not crowded. Too little space makes people uncomfortable, and too much can make the event feel empty. Think about layout as well as total capacity.
A venue that is easy to reach by public transport or car, and close to accommodation or amenities, improves attendance and overall satisfaction. Consider where your audience is coming from when choosing the location.
Yes. A visit helps you check how the space feels, assess sight lines, acoustics and logistics, and see whether the environment matches your event goals.
Ask about capacity, support services, sound and lighting equipment, accessibility, parking or transport links, catering options, staff support during the event, and any restrictions on timing or setup.
Stay in close contact with venue staff, get all agreements in writing, and have backup plans for critical elements such as room layout, equipment or timing. Clear communication and preparation reduce stress if changes arise.
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