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028. Event Planning with Jessica D'Amico
          
        Where we plan events
Getting started with event planning
      - Erik: Lansing Codes
 - Leo: Lansing Marketing Hackers
 - Jess: Peers Conference
 
Getting started with event planning
- Organizing an event as a way to connect people that can help each other out
 - Events have many benefits including establishing oneself in a community, educating others, reinforcing skills, developing new skills, and opportunities to travel
 - Find speakers by paying attention to who's talking online and offer a way to accept proposals
 - Find sponsors and volunteers by picking ambassadors who know an area well and are eager to ask others for help
 - For a first event, start small, set reasonable goals, and keep logistics such as room size in mind
 - As an event grows, try different things to keep things fresh and understand what the audience wants
 - Some ways to get participants contributing:
- Ask "what are you working on?"
 - Ask an audience about the challenges they face
 - Host speed-dating style events
 - Think about formats you've never used before
 
 - Consider the power dynamics at your event
 - Pick a venue that is physically accessible and easy to get to
 - Reach a wider audience by repeating your message a lot, talk about what you're doing, help people be seen, offer discounts and free tickets to underrepresented people
 - Twitter is a great place to practice talking to and helping others
 
- Start locally and keep it simple to avoid unnecessary challenges
 - Make sure to cover the basic necessities like water and bathrooms
 - Help everyone feel welcome
 - Don't make the event a sales pitch
 - Pay attention to the things that feel right
 - Paying a venue to manage logistics can reduce the stress and planning you need to do, but can cost more and seem less authentic
 - Have a few backup speakers or audience members who can wing a conversation
 - Layout a logistics plan down to the minute
 - Audiences are often sympathetic when challenges arise
 - Write down the things you want to pay attention to and keep it in mind when reading tweets, considering proposals, etc.
 - Make sure your profiles on social media direct people where you want them to get involved
 - Have a Code of Conduct and be clear about it
 - Train on important issues like how to remove a disruptor and what to do in a medical emergency
 - You can’t have a plan for everything, but planning helps prepare for the unexpected things too
 - Be selective about where you’re spending your time
 - Emulate people you think are doing it well
 
- Google Sheets for budget tracking
 - TypeForm for forms and surveys
 - Zapier for scheduling and automating communication
 - Trello for task management
 - Twitter Lists for reaching and connecting people
 - TweetBot to more effectively navigate Twitter
 - Buffer for scheduling social media
 - Slack for coordinating with your team
 
- Twitter: @justjessdc
 - Peers Conference
 - DC Women Who Code
 
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