Events aren't free — and their ROI isn't unmeasurable

The most common question put to HR and marketing managers who organise events: what do those events deliver? It's a fair question. But it's also one many organisations don't have a ready answer to.

That isn't because events don't deliver. It is because most organisations have never measured event ROI in a structured way. They know the event 'went well' — but they have no figures to back that up. And that makes it harder to defend the budget, scale up or experiment with new formats.

Event ROI is in fact measurable. But you have to know which KPIs belong to which event type. You measure an employee-engagement event differently from a client event. You measure a conference differently from a product launch. This article gives you the framework for picking the right measurement method per event type.

Which KPIs fit which event type?

The most common mistake is that organisations try to apply one ROI framework to every event. It doesn't work. Each event type has its own purpose: and that purpose decides the relevant KPIs.

Events aimed at employee engagement are measured on: employee satisfaction (pre/post survey), absence rates after the event, NPS or eNPS, and retention in the six months that follow. Client events are measured on: pipeline impact (how many attendees became active customers or deal partners within three months), client retention, Net Promoter Score of attendees vs. non-attendees, and deal margin among clients who attended.

Brand events are measured on: brand awareness and brand association (pre/post survey among the target audience), social media reach and engagement, press coverage and earned media, and NPS among attendees. Conferences and knowledge events are measured on: leads generated, average deal velocity after the event, and quality of contacts via follow-up conversions.

More on measuring client event impact →

Direct ROI: leads and revenue from commercial events

For commercially focused events (client lunches, networking gatherings and product launches) direct ROI is the clearest measurement to reach for. You look at the revenue value that can be traced directly to attendance at the event.

Set a measurement window — say, six months after the event. Map which deals, contracts or renewed contact link directly to attendance. Compare the average deal size and deal velocity of attendees vs. a comparable group of non-attendees.

Then set the revenue generated against the total event cost. An event of €20,000 that leads to €150,000 in new deals over six months has an ROI of 650 per cent. That is the figure that changes the budget conversation.

Indirect ROI: engagement, retention and brand strength

For internal events (staff parties, kick-offs and onboarding events) the ROI is indirect — but no less real. It's less visible, and just as powerful when you measure it well.

The two most reliable indicators for internal events are retention and engagement. A departing employee costs, on average, six to nine months of salary in recruitment costs and lost productivity. If an annual event lifts retention by 5 per cent in a company of 200 people, the saving quickly reaches €150,000 or more — against an event budget of perhaps €40,000.

Run a short employee survey before the event and two weeks after. Measure on engagement dimensions (pride in the company, sense of connection, motivation). Repeat it every year. Over time you build a dataset that demonstrates the value of events beyond doubt.

More on measuring engagement at internal events →

Measuring before, during and after: the practical framework

Measuring event ROI works across three moments. Before the event: define the objectives and the KPIs that go with them. Take a baseline. What are the current scores on employee satisfaction, client NPS, brand association? Set the measurement window for the after-event comparison.

During the event: register attendance precisely. Segment it: who was there, in which role, from which department? You need that data for the comparative analysis afterwards. Where it fits, ask for a direct reaction at the close — a short (three-question) moment survey via QR code.

After the event: measure on the agreed KPIs. Run the post-event survey. Track pipeline movement among attendees (for commercial events). Compare absence and turnover among attendees vs. non-attendees (for internal events). Combine all the data in an impact report you can share with leadership and budget owners.

Live Impact and ROI reporting

Live Impact doesn't just help clients to organise events; we also help them measure the impact. On request, we deliver an impact report after the event — including an analysis of attendance data, direct feedback and recommendations for follow-up measurement.

We believe events should prove their own return. Not as a justification to leadership, but as a tool for getting better. An event we measure is an event we understand. An event we understand gets better every year.

Want help setting up an ROI measurement framework for your events? Send us a brief — we'll start with the question that truly matters: what is this event supposed to mean for your organisation?

Ready to make the ROI of your events visible?

The budget conversation changes when you have figures. And those figures are within reach the moment you start measuring structurally.

Send a brief via live-impact.nl/briefing or get in touch via live-impact.nl/contact. We'll think with you about the event — and the measurement that goes with it.

Seriously fun.

Frequently asked questions

Why do clients choose Live Impact?

Because we deliver the concept and the delivery from a single source. Because we are honest about budget, planning and what is and isn't possible. Because we stay sharp down to the last detail. And because we have a database of hundreds of acts and venues that we deploy successfully time and again. Seriously fun working, we call that.

Want to know more? Plan an introductory meeting.

Which companies does Live Impact work for?

We work for medium-sized and large organisations that take their event seriously. From family business to listed company, from healthcare to logistics, from retail to tech. What our clients have in common: they want an event that fits. Not an event that looks like last year's.

Curious whether we're a good fit for you? Plan an introductory meeting.

Does Live Impact devise concepts or only deliver them?

Both. We're an agency that devises concepts and delivers them. Because an idea without production fades, and a production without an idea feels empty. With us they come together, so nothing is lost along the way between what's devised and what's built. One team, one story, from first sketch to final lighting cue.

More on our approach? Schedule an introduction.

What exactly does Live Impact do?

Live Impact is an agency that creates and delivers corporate events. We deliberately do both: the concept and the production come from one hand. That way the idea stays intact from first sketch to last lighting cue. We make staff parties, anniversaries, kick-offs, customer events, conferences and family days.

Want to know more? Plan an introductory meeting.

How does a collaboration with Live Impact work?

We start with a good conversation about your question, your people and your story. Then comes a first concept proposal with a budget. On approval we work it out and arrange everything from venue to acts. On the day itself we make sure everything runs. Afterwards we evaluate. One point of contact, no hidden handovers.

Want to know more? Schedule an introduction.

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