Events & Conferences for Media & Entertainment at Growth Stage
A step-by-step playbook for implementing events conferences at a Growth Stage-stage Media & Entertainment company. This guide covers everything from initial setup and team requirements to execution, measurement, and optimization — tailored specifically for Media & Entertainment companies with enterprise-level marketing and growth budget and mature growth organization with specialized teams. Includes specific KPIs, recommended tools, common pitfalls to avoid, and expert insights from Ehsan Jahandarpour.
Timeline: 2-4 weeks
Prerequisites
- ✓ Established product with proven product-market fit
- ✓ Analytics infrastructure capturing key user events
- ✓ DMCA, copyright enforcement, and content moderation policies are critical — ensure compliance before scaling
- ✓ Budget allocated for event participation in the Media & Entertainment space
- ✓ Marketing collateral and demo environment ready
Step-by-Step Guide
Identify high-ROI events
Research industry events where your target buyers attend. Evaluate by attendee quality, cost, speaking opportunities, and networking potential. For Media & Entertainment companies at the Growth Stage stage, this step is particularly important given sustaining growth while improving profitability.
Pro tip: Talk to your best customers about which events they attend — follow your buyers, not the biggest brand names. In the Media & Entertainment context, also consider: content monetization challenges.
Develop a pre-event outreach strategy
Book meetings with target accounts before the event. Use the event as a reason to reach out and offer exclusive demos or 1:1 sessions. For Media & Entertainment companies at the Growth Stage stage, this step is particularly important given sustaining growth while improving profitability.
Pro tip: Start outreach 4-6 weeks before the event. Target 3x the meetings you want — expect 30% show rate. In the Media & Entertainment context, also consider: audience fragmentation.
Create compelling booth and materials
Design an engaging booth experience with interactive demos, not just posters. Prepare leave-behinds, one-pagers, and QR codes for instant signup. For Media & Entertainment companies at the Growth Stage stage, this step is particularly important given sustaining growth while improving profitability.
Pro tip: Live product demos at your booth generate 5x more leads than static displays. In the Media & Entertainment context, also consider: creator economy competition.
Pursue speaking opportunities
Submit talk proposals that deliver genuine value to attendees. Position your team as thought leaders, not product pitchers. For Media & Entertainment companies at the Growth Stage stage, this step is particularly important given sustaining growth while improving profitability.
Pro tip: Co-present with a customer — it is more credible and doubles your audience reach. In the Media & Entertainment context, also consider: ad revenue volatility.
Execute post-event follow-up
Follow up within 48 hours of the event. Segment leads by conversation quality and route to appropriate nurture tracks or sales handoffs. For Media & Entertainment companies at the Growth Stage stage, this step is particularly important given sustaining growth while improving profitability.
Pro tip: Send a personalized follow-up referencing the specific conversation — generic "nice to meet you" emails get ignored. In the Media & Entertainment context, also consider: content monetization challenges.
Expected Outcomes
- ✓ 20-40 qualified leads per Media & Entertainment event attended
- ✓ Event-sourced pipeline ROI above 5:1 within 90 days post-event
- ✓ 2-3 speaking engagements at top Media & Entertainment conferences per quarter
- ✓ Brand awareness lift of 15-25% among target accounts post-event season
KPIs to Track
- ● Pipeline from event leads
- ● Speaking engagement invitations
- ● Brand impressions
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Ehsan's Growth Commentary
Media events are the product for media companies — content is the event and the event is the content. The New York Times hosts live events (TimesTalks, DealBook Summit) that generate subscriber acquisition AND premium advertising revenue simultaneously. The media event strategy: host events that serve your editorial mission and monetize through ticket sales, sponsorships, and content repurposing. A single well-produced live event generates: (1) ticket revenue ($50-500 per attendee), (2) sponsorship revenue ($25K-500K per sponsor), (3) video content for digital distribution, (4) social media content, (5) newsletter content, and (6) subscriber acquisition (attendees who are not subscribers convert at 15-25%). The media event ROI is multiplicative: one event generates revenue across 6+ channels. TED built a billion-dollar media brand primarily through live events that produce content consumed by hundreds of millions online. The event is the content factory.
The real ROI of events is in the meetings you book before the event, not the booth traffic during it. In Media & Entertainment, hosting a small dinner for 15-20 executives generates more pipeline than a 500-person conference booth. Always have a post-event follow-up sequence ready before the event starts. Speed matters — follow up within 24 hours.
Ehsan Jahandarpour
AI Growth Strategist & Fractional CMO
Forbes Top 20 Growth Hacker · TEDx Speaker · 716 Academic Citations · Ex-Microsoft · CMO at FirstWave (ASX:FCT) · Forbes Communications Council