The event that no one came to

Photograph by Stefano Borghi-Cartier
Photograph by Stefano Borghi-Cartier

If you have ever been involved in organising events, then you’ve probably been there, unless you have been super fortunate or you run always the world’s most amazing events.

I perhaps have not and I have had a few ‘no shows’ or events with just a fraction of what I expected as a turnout.

Two things, I have always enjoyed even the smallest events, OK when no one comes it’s a little harder conversation wise.

Most importantly, no one died. The world didn’t end. I learnt and ran another event.

The learning is to make your event as focused as possible on providing something worth people exchanging their time for. It is what will be useful to them, not you.

It is about creating and offering value.

A glass of free orange juice, some crisps and a chance to network has been done. Done to death.

Be bold, be different, and realise that it is not about the number of attendees, it is to make sure the event was valuable enough to get the attendee(s) back to the next one and telling others what a great event it was.

No matter how many come to your event, keep going, but keep making it the best you can.

Patience, perseverance and a value to others from the event are three things to not lose sight of.

Risk

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Risk, it’s a great game and similar to life, every single game is another chance to succeed or not.

Often, we think that it’s the dice that determines the outcome, and sure in any one game you can have a bad run, but overall it evens out.

There are two things that determine the game.

Having a strategy and taking the risk of executing it.

Life is the same, have a plan, give it a go and see what happens.

Often we get held up on blaming the roll of the dice, something that we have no control of.

As in the game, in life, we have another day, another chance to try a different strategy.