July 28, 2016
Ever wondered if you're making fatal mistakes that could kill your event? There was a particular event that I attended that ticked people off so badly, they were practically turning around in the parking lot to leave before the event even began. I’ll walk you through what happened and how you can prevent this blunder from happening at your event.It all started a quarter-mile before the parking lot entrance. The line to enter the lot had backed up way down the road. Why you ask? The event had a single line of entry and was charging a $10 cash only parking fee.Participants were upset about this unexpected fee, but not as furious as they were about the cash-only payment option. I mean, who carries cash these days anyway? People were so pumped for the event, they would have gotten over the parking fee, but the fact that they couldn’t even pay it meant… you guessed it! They had to leave to find an ATM.When the participants expressed their surprise and frustration about the parking fee, the parking attendants claimed, “It was mentioned in email communication leading up to the event. You must not have read it.” Let’s first take notice that that is not a response I would recommend giving to a ticked off participant. Secondly, if this were true, my hunch is, that important detail was likely buried in paragraphs of information nobody read; which basically made the email useless.Once people finally made it in the parking lot, many were tailgating, blasting fun music and rallying each other up, I even saw a few high chest bumps take place to re-establish the energy and enthusiasm.That excitement soon fizzled yet again though. It was a long trek from the parking lot to the event check-in. Seated outside the check-in point were two volunteers at a small table with a stack of papers and pens. These volunteers were stopping excited participants in their tracks to sign a waiver and required participants to show ID in order to sign.These participants had to take an angry jaunt back to their car to grab their ID, then return to check-in to sign the waiver. This was the type of event where an ID would not survive the badassery that was about to ensue, so many ran back to their cars to drop off their ID. You would think they would be safe to enter at this point.But wait, it got worse…When these participants returned to check-in after dropping their IDs back off at the car, the participants were additionally greeted with, “Wait, you need to sign a waiver. Can we please see your ID?” The people at the check-in table had no way to verify who had previously signed the waiver or not. You can imagine how this went over…. There was name calling, finger pointing, gate skipping and chaos.
Please take the advice above and avoid this disastrous situation. Nothing makes us cringe more than when we see events make mistakes that leave a bad taste in attendees mouths, especially when the mistakes could have been prevented!