Organizer Resources
Planning Toolkit
A practical, phase-by-phase guide to taking your conference or workshop from idea to execution.
The planning roadmap
Student-organized conferences succeed when they are treated as real projects: with deadlines, clear ownership, shared documentation, and genuine accountability. This toolkit walks you through the full planning lifecycle — from defining your event's purpose to archiving materials for next year's team.
The phases below assume an event approximately 8–12 weeks away. If your timeline is shorter, compress phases, increase meeting frequency, and prioritize ruthlessly. If your timeline is longer, use the extra time to do deeper speaker research, more thoughtful outreach, and more thorough accessibility planning.
Start here: your purpose statement
Before any logistics, write this sentence as a team: "By the end of this event, attendees will…" Everything else — the sessions, the speakers, the venue — should be in service of that answer. If you cannot complete the sentence, you are not ready to plan a schedule yet.
Planning Phases
Six phases from concept to conference day
Each phase has a time frame and a checklist. Work through them in order — and revisit earlier phases if priorities shift.
Define & Discover
8–12 weeks before- Write a one-paragraph event purpose statement
- Identify your primary and secondary audiences
- Set a target attendance range (minimum and maximum)
- Survey potential attendees about needs and interests
- Research comparable events for format and scope ideas
- Confirm the event date range — check for conflicts with academic calendars, holidays, and local events
- Identify two or three potential venues
- Set a preliminary budget ceiling
- Identify key stakeholders who need to approve or support the event
Build Your Team
7–10 weeks before- Recruit core organizing team members (aim for 4–8 people)
- Assign primary roles — Program, Logistics, Communications, Sponsorship, Day-Of
- Schedule recurring planning meetings (weekly or biweekly)
- Set up shared project management tools (folder structure, task tracker, calendar)
- Draft a team agreements document: communication norms, decision-making process, conflict resolution
- Identify external collaborators (faculty advisors, partner organizations, venue contacts)
- Confirm advisor or institutional sponsor if required by your school
Design the Program
6–9 weeks before- Draft a learning arc and session structure (see Curriculum Library)
- Identify session formats and any special programming
- Begin speaker outreach — personalized, specific, early
- Confirm keynote or featured speaker first
- Draft session descriptions for all major programming blocks
- Create a speaker/facilitator briefing template
- Finalize track structure or single-track sequence
- Share draft program with advisors and stakeholders for early feedback
Lock Logistics
5–7 weeks before- Sign venue contract and confirm room assignments
- Book AV equipment or confirm venue AV
- Confirm catering needs — dietary restrictions, timing, quantities
- Set up registration system (form, confirmation emails, waitlist logic)
- Draft full event-day run-of-show (minute-by-minute schedule)
- Create signage and wayfinding plan
- Confirm accessibility accommodations for all spaces
- Finalize sponsorship tiers and begin outreach (see Sponsorship Guide)
- Confirm budget and identify any funding gaps
Communicate & Promote
3–6 weeks before- Launch public registration
- Publish event website or landing page with full schedule
- Send save-the-date to all target audiences
- Begin social media promotion
- Reach out to campus departments, partner organizations, and media
- Send speaker confirmation emails with logistics details
- Brief volunteers and day-of staff on roles
- Send reminder emails to registered attendees one week out
Execute & Wrap
Event week & after- Run a full team walkthrough of the venue the day before if possible
- Confirm all AV, catering, and registration logistics morning-of
- Execute day-of run-of-show with a designated timekeeper
- Collect session feedback via digital or paper forms
- Hold a team debrief within one week
- Send thank-you messages to speakers, sponsors, and volunteers
- Publish post-event content (photos, recordings, key takeaways)
- Write a brief impact report for sponsors and stakeholders
- Archive all planning documents for next year's team
Team Roles
Building your organizing team
A good organizing team has clear ownership without rigidity. The roles below are starting points — combine them for smaller teams, split them further for larger events. The key is that every area has one named person who is accountable and empowered to make decisions.
Avoid the common trap of assigning roles by availability rather than fit. Someone who cares about the program should lead program design. Someone who is organized and detail-oriented should lead logistics. Match people to work that suits them.
Program Director
- Owns the event purpose statement and learning arc
- Leads speaker recruitment and coordination
- Manages session descriptions and speaker briefings
- Works with Logistics to match session needs to space
Logistics Coordinator
- Manages venue booking, contract, and day-of site contact
- Coordinates AV, catering, signage, and room setup
- Owns the run-of-show document
- Leads day-of operations and troubleshooting
Communications Lead
- Manages external communications: website, email, social
- Owns the promotional timeline
- Drafts and sends all attendee and speaker communications
- Coordinates media coverage if applicable
Sponsorship Lead
- Researches and contacts potential sponsors
- Manages the sponsorship packet and tier structure
- Tracks sponsor commitments and deliverables
- Coordinates sponsor recognition and post-event reporting
Registration Manager
- Builds and manages the registration system
- Collects accessibility and dietary information
- Manages waitlists and confirmations
- Runs badge pickup and check-in on event day
Volunteer Coordinator
- Recruits and schedules day-of volunteers
- Creates role descriptions and briefing materials
- Runs the volunteer check-in and orientation
- Acts as first point of contact for volunteers during the event
On team agreements
At your first planning meeting, take 20 minutes to document how your team will work: how decisions get made, how conflicts are resolved, what to do when someone cannot meet a deadline, and how to escalate issues. This document will feel unnecessary until the moment you need it — and then you will be glad it exists.
Logistics Checklist
Everything that needs to exist before the doors open
Logistics failures are visible to everyone. Use this checklist to audit your preparedness at least two weeks before event day. If any item is not resolved by then, escalate it immediately — do not wait.
Venue
Contract signed and confirmed
Room assignments match session needs
Step-free access confirmed for all spaces
Parking and transit directions finalized
Emergency exits and procedures reviewed
AV & Tech
Projectors and screens confirmed for all session rooms
Microphones available for all speaking sessions
Captioning or CART service arranged if needed
Wi-Fi credentials available for speakers
Backup power strips and extension cords on-site
Catering
Dietary needs collected in registration
Meal timing fits schedule (not cut into sessions)
Water and light refreshments available throughout
Allergy information communicated to caterer in writing
Trash and recycling plan in place
Materials
Printed schedules and session descriptions ready
Name badges prepared for all registrants
Signage printed: welcome, room labels, wayfinding
Speaker handouts or slides collected in advance
Feedback forms or QR codes ready
Day-Of Operations
Running the event well
If you have planned well, event day is the payoff — not the problem-solving session. Your goal on the day of is execution, not improvisation. The best way to achieve that is a thorough run-of-show document and a calm, briefed team.
The run-of-show document
A run-of-show is a minute-by-minute timeline of everything that happens on event day. It includes room assignments, who is responsible for each moment, AV transitions, when meals are served, when speakers should be at their rooms, and contingency notes. Every team member should have a copy before they arrive. Update it in real time if plans shift.
Designate a timekeeper
Sessions that run over compress everything downstream. One team member should be responsible for watching the clock and giving speakers a two-minute warning. This role is easy to overlook and essential to protect.
Create a communication channel
Set up a group chat or walkie-talkie system for your core team. Issues arise — a speaker is stuck in traffic, a projector is not working, a room change is needed. The team that communicates quickly solves problems before attendees notice them.
Reminder: take care of your team
Organizers are often so focused on attendees that they forget to eat, rest, or step outside. Build in short breaks for your team. Assign someone to check in on how the team is doing at the midpoint of the day. Your event goes better when your organizers are well.
Day-of timeline (sample)
Team arrives, venue walkthrough, AV test
Registration table opens, volunteers briefed at stations
Doors open, check-in begins
Welcome remarks and opening session
First session block (breakouts or main program)
Lunch — check in with team, solve any mid-day issues
Second session block
Final session or keynote
Closing remarks, distribute feedback forms
Event ends — team begins load-out and debrief
Post-Event Wrap-Up
The event is not over when the doors close
The week after your event is where institutional memory is built or lost. How you follow up with speakers, sponsors, attendees, and your own team determines whether your event has a future — and whether next year's organizers have the resources they need to build on your work.
Thank-you messages
Send personalized thank-you notes to every speaker, sponsor, and key volunteer within three days. Generic emails are noticed. Specific, sincere acknowledgments are remembered.
Feedback analysis
Compile session feedback forms and produce a brief internal summary. What did attendees find most valuable? What fell flat? What would they change? Share this with the full team.
Team debrief
Hold a structured debrief meeting within one week. Go through each phase of planning and ask: what worked, what did not, and what would we do differently. Document the answers.
Impact report
Write a brief impact report for sponsors and institutional stakeholders. Include attendance numbers, session highlights, feedback themes, and photos. This is also your best fundraising tool for next year.
Documentation archive
Collect all planning documents — budget, run-of-show, speaker contracts, logistics checklists — into a shared folder. Label everything clearly. Next year's team will thank you.
Public follow-up
Post a recap to your event website or social channels: photos, a summary of what happened, and next steps for attendees who want to stay engaged. Keep momentum alive.
Common Mistakes
What to avoid
These are the six most common student event planning mistakes — and the practical fixes that address them.
Mistake
Overpacking the schedule
Fix
Leave at least 15–20 minutes of buffer between sessions. Attendees need transition time, and events run late. A realistic schedule is always better than an optimistic one.
Mistake
Waiting too long to confirm speakers
Fix
Good speakers fill their calendars fast. Send speaker invitations at least 8 weeks out for a major event. Follow up within a week if you don't hear back.
Mistake
Building the event for organizers, not attendees
Fix
Every decision — from session topics to room layout to meal timing — should prioritize the attendee experience. Run each decision through the question: "Does this serve the people coming?"
Mistake
Skipping the run-of-show document
Fix
A run-of-show is a minute-by-minute timeline for event day that every team member has. Without it, information lives in individual heads and the event suffers when one person is unavailable.
Mistake
Underestimating registration complexity
Fix
Registration is more than a form. Plan for confirmation emails, waitlist management, dietary collection, badge printing, and day-of check-in. Assign one person to own it entirely.
Mistake
Forgetting the post-event follow-through
Fix
The event is not over when attendees leave. Thank-you messages, impact reports, feedback summaries, and documentation are essential — both for sponsors and for next year's team.
Planning your program content?
The Curriculum Library is where program design starts.
Before you lock your session schedule, use the Curriculum Library to design a meaningful learning arc, choose session formats, and write useful outcomes for every session block.