Most events that fail to deliver what the client had in mind start with a brief that was too vague or incomplete. Not with bad execution, not with the wrong venue, not with disappointing entertainment. With a foundation that was off.

A brief is the contract between what you want and what an agency makes. If that contract is vague, everyone works harder but in different directions. The agency makes assumptions. The client has expectations that were never said out loud. The result is an event that is fine, but not what you meant.

A good brief takes you two hours. A bad brief costs you two rounds of revisions, frustration on both sides and sometimes an event you did not really want. The best event agencies ask the right questions. But you also need to have the right answers ready.

The five building blocks of a strong brief

A strong event brief has five building blocks. Without any one of these five, the brief is incomplete.

The first building block is context: what is the occasion for this event? What is the background of the organisation, the culture, the recent history that is relevant to this event? The second is objective: what does this event have to achieve? Not 'a nice evening', but concrete outcomes. Third: the audience. Describe who the participants are, what they expect and what they already know about the organisation. Fourth: budget. An honest, concrete number, or at least a range. Fifth: constraints. What is fixed? Date, venue, brand guidelines, sensitivities?

Each of these building blocks matters equally. A brief without an objective is a wishlist. A brief without a budget is an invitation to guess. A brief without context is an instruction without a story.

The audience: the most underestimated section

The audience is the section that is thinnest in most briefs. '400 employees' tells you nothing. Who are those 400 employees? Think about their average age, their diversity in background, role and seniority, and their experience of large events last year. Are they people who like to dance, or people who would rather stand chatting in a quiet corner?

The more detail you give on the audience, the more targeted the agency can be. It makes a difference whether the 400 employees are mostly 25-year-old IT staff or a mixed group of 25 to 60 covering both management and operational staff.

Also add: what does the audience already know about the organisation, what previous events have there been, and what were the reactions? An agency that knows that can go one step beyond repeating what happened last year.

Budget: be honest, be specific

Budget is the most painful part of a brief and at the same time the most decisive. Many clients are reluctant to name a budget, afraid the agency will spend all of it. But without a budget indication the agency makes a proposal that may be three times too expensive. Or three times too cheap.

An honest budget makes the work better. The agency knows what is possible and can advise on the best split. It helps to specify: is it including or excluding VAT, catering and entertainment?

If you genuinely do not know the budget: give a range. '€20,000 to €40,000' is enough for an agency to put a realistic proposal together. More on the cost of an event agency and how to build a budget.

Context and constraints: give the whole picture

A good brief tells what you want. What you do not want. What cannot be done, and what has already happened. Context is the information an agency needs to understand what is really at stake.

What is fixed? Think date, venue and maximum running time. Are there brand guidelines, house-style requirements, sensitive themes or particular circumstances in the organisation or the group the agency needs to know about?

Anything you leave out of the brief, the agency has to guess. Anything you include makes the proposal better. An agency that understands what has already been decided can build from that starting point instead of reinventing the wheel.

How Live Impact handles your brief

Live Impact never works from a stock proposition. Every event starts with the brief. We read it carefully and ask the questions that are missing. From there we build a concept that fits your organisation and audience.

Don't have a full brief yet? No problem. Send us what you have. A few paragraphs about the occasion, a budget indication, a date. We ask the questions that take you further. A good conversation is also a way to build a brief.

Send your brief through live-impact.nl/briefing or get in touch directly via live-impact.nl/contact. Call 085 401 40 14 or email hello@live-impact.nl. We respond within 48 hours.

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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