If you’ve hosted an event in the past, you’ve already done the hardest part. You’ve gathered an audience that showed up, engaged, and had a great time. But are you tapping into that goldmine of opportunity now?
Retargeting past attendees is one of the easiest and most cost-effective ways to grow your event audience and increase repeat ticket sales without starting from scratch each time.
Here’s why it works and how to start doing it today:
1. Email Campaigns
Send a segmented email to past attendees with an early-access offer, discount code, or VIP upgrade. Bonus: use language like “We’d love to see you again!” to add a personal touch.
2. Upload Your List to Social Media
Platforms like Facebook and Instagram allow you to upload email lists and target those users directly with ads for your next event. This keeps your event top-of-mind even outside the inbox.
3. Create a Post-Event Survey with a Purpose
Send a short follow-up survey after your event and ask one key question: Would you attend a future event? Use their answers to guide who you reach out to next time.
4. Launch a “Next Event” Teaser
If you’re planning another event soon, send a teaser campaign to your previous list before announcing to the public. Let them feel like VIPs.
5. Use Lookalike Audiences
Once you have a strong list of past attendees, you can use that data to build lookalike audiences online, people with similar interests and behaviors who are more likely to buy.
Keep your event brand alive between events by sending occasional updates, behind-the-scenes content, or early access announcements. This builds momentum for the next big thing.
Start small, stay consistent, and watch your attendance grow with each event.
Already have an event coming up? Now is the perfect time to re-engage your past attendees.
As temperatures drop and calendars fill, fall offers some of the richest event opportunities of…
Labor Day is barely in the rearview mirror before holiday inquiries start flooding in. If…
The event is over, the venue is cleared, and the thank-you emails are sent. For…
The ask used to be optional. A client might mention they'd "love" compostable cups or…
Most event managers treat post-event content as an afterthought, a recap post, maybe a thank-you…
For years, event social media has followed the same playbook: announce, hype, sell, repeat. But…
This website uses cookies.