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April 21, 2008
A Word About "Event Planning"
This one goes out especially to writers and reporters doing stories on Eventful. :-)
Dear reporters: far too often I see Eventful described as follows: "Eventful, an event-planning site, etc."
I would like to take this opportunity to explain what event-planning is, and why Eventful is not, and never has been, an "event-planning" site.
What better source to turn to than Wikipedia, which, I am delighted to discover, has a clear definition of what event-planning is. So without further ado, here are the first four paragraph's of Wikipedia's entry on "event planning":
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Event planning is the process of planning a festival, ceremony, competition, party, or convention.
Event planning includes budgeting, establishing dates and alternate dates, selecting and reserving the event site, acquiring permits, and coordinating transportation and parking.
Event planning also includes some or all of the following, depending on the event: developing a theme or motif for the event, arranging for speakers and alternate speakers, coordinating location support (such as electricity and other utilities), arranging decor, tables, chairs, tents, event support and security, police, fire, portable toilets, parking, signage, emergency plans, health care professionals, and cleanup.
Event Planning is a relatively new career field. There is now training that helps one trying to break into the career field. There must be training for an event planner to handle all the pressure and work efficiently. This career deals with a lot of communication and organization aspects. There are many different names for an event planner such as a conference coordinator, a convention planner, a special event coordinator, and a meeting manager.
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In a nutshell, that's not Eventful. Indeed, that description inolves way too many atoms, and far too few bits. In other words, we are about information, not the physical "heavy lifting" of putting on actual events and dealing with all the logistical headaches. Nah. No worries about decor, tables, chairs, tents, let alone police, fire, portable toilets, and whatnot. We're geeks. We work with computers. :-)
So if Eventful is not, so I dare to claim, an "event planning site", what is it?
It's the best way on the Internet to discover, share, track, create, and demand events. Since day one, Eventful's mission has been, in three words, to "maximize event discovery", something that I felt the Internet had done a poor job doing in the years prior to a service like Eventful being available. "Event discovery" is the act of discovering events that are interesting and meaningful to you such that you want to go to them and hopefully do wind up going to them.
How does this act of discovery take place? By finding out what your friends are doing. By sharing what you're doing with your friends. By having the system recommend events to you based on your interests. By browsing through the site and discovering events you might never have heard of before. By joining groups whose members share an interest, and, together, all of you can find events related to that interest. This is what discovery is all about. It is very powerful.
So what about "share"? Sharing means taking those discoveries you've made, and telling others about them, that simple! Getting the word out. Making your discovery someone else's discovery, and so on, and so on.
What do I mean by "track"? I mean tracking things down -- having the system work on your behalf to automatically and regularly search for people and subjects you are interested in, and when it finds events that match those people and subjects, it lets you know in as much advance time as possible. Did you know that whenever you search Eventful, you can save the search results as an RSS or iCal feed, and then re-run those feeds any time you wish, to get fresh results? That's tracking. Did you know that you can save a search, give it a name, and have it listed in your My Eventful page, and tell the system how often you wish to receive email notifications whenever the system finds items that match your search terms? That is tracking. Did you know that you can use My Eventful's iTunes / Last.fm importing feature to instantly import all of your favorite musical artists, and then Eventful will email you whenever any of them announces they're coming to your town for a performance? That's very powerful tracking.
By "create" I mean two things -- first, simply posting new event listings on the site, either via our Add Event page or the Eventful API for the developers out there. Second, by using Eventful Demand to create a groundswell of interest and support for an event in your town that you and your fellow demanders really, really, really want to have happen. When events come about because of Eventful Demand, you can truly say that you've helped "create" them.
And finally, "demand" -- using our world-famous Eventful Demand service, unique on the Internet, you can connect to performers and get them to come to your town for an event, be it a concert, comedy show, political rally, interview, public appearance, speech, book signing, film screening, or whatever other type of event you wish. Ask, ask loudly enough, and you shall be surprised at how often you can receive . . .
So. Not "event-planning." When you see that in a published news story about Eventful, you know somebody has not done their homework. :-)
Meanwhile, invite your friends to come on in and together use Eventful, especially the My Eventful feature inside Eventful, to its fullest -- indeed, the very best way to get the most out of Eventful is when your friends use it too. That way, each of you doesn't have to do much to get all the recommendations and event discoveries from the others.
Posted by brian at 12:45 PM
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March 03, 2008
Vote for Eventful for a WebWare 2008 Award

Last year we won a WebWare 2007 award thanks to all of the votes we received from supportive fans. Time to vote again this year!
They've re-arranged the categories this year, and we're in a very crowded group, "Commerce and Events", which they describe as including "Retail, auctions, travel, real estate, concerts, conferences" (yikes!). So, more than ever, we need your votes and your friends and family's votes so we beat out the likes of Amazon, eBay, Craigslist, Google, and others!
Click on the logo here to go vote, or, click this link!
Voting Ends March 31st! Be sure to get your friends and family to vote for us too. Thanks!
Posted by brian at 07:19 AM
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February 25, 2008
Eventful: Now with 5 Million Users!

We reached the 5-million-user mark today. Thanks to our users all over the world for their continued support. Keep sending us feedback on how we can make Eventful better!
Posted by brian at 12:00 PM
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January 03, 2008
Eventful's Online Demand Data Reveals Obama and Huckabee Strong Ahead of Iowa Caucus
Obama and Huckabee Demanded in More Cities in State of Iowa Than Any Other Candidates
SAN DIEGO, Calif. - Eventful, the leading global events web site, announced today that Presidential candidates Barack Obama and Mike Huckabee are the most 'Demanded' candidates by their users in the state of Iowa, and have surged to the top of Eventful's Hottest Demands rankings, just hours before the first votes are cast in the Iowa caucus. Both Obama and Huckabee have requests to speak in over 60 cities throughout Iowa, more than any other candidate.
In the last 24 hours, Obama has amassed 1,436 new online Demands, from supporters lobbying for his appearance in local towns around the country. This brings his total to over 47,000, far ahead of the other leading Democratic candidates, Hillary Clinton and John Edwards. Meanwhile, Huckabee has gained a more modest 258 new people in the same period to inch ahead of fellow Republican candidates such as John McCain and Ron Paul.
The Eventful Demand data reflects the findings of The Des Moines Register's latest poll, placing Obama and Huckabee as the winners of today's influential caucus.
The strength of online support in Iowa and the late surge in Demands may be seen as an indicator of today's results, and could also indicate the engagement of a key demographic for winning the Iowa caucus - the youth vote.
Eventful Demand is a free online service that empowers supporters to lobby for political figures to come and speak in their local town. Using Eventful, candidates can track where they are most in demand, schedule appearances based on this data and also communicate directly with the Demanders via email.
Eventful Demand is a viral service that has transformed the way that audiences interact with public figures and performers, empowering them to directly influence where events take place. Eventful's viral tools make it easy for campaigns and supporters to spread the word by including links and widgets in blogs, MySpace pages, Facebook groups and other social networking sites.
"Since the inception of the 2008 campaign, we've seen our users create grass-roots campaigns on our site, to lobby for their preferred candidate to come speak in their local town," said Jordan Glazier, CEO at Eventful. "One of the key themes of this election has to be voter empowerment, enabling people to have their say on the issues that impact them the most. The increase in Demands ahead of today's caucus reflects this, and could well be an indicator of the result."
About Eventful Inc.
San Diego based Eventful, Inc., operates Eventful.com, the leading events website which enables its community of users to discover, promote, share and create events throughout the world. Eventful users select from nearly 4 million events taking place in local markets throughout the world, from concerts and sports to singles events and political rallies. Eventful's Demand service enables users to influence where their favorite performers appear by creating viral grass-roots campaigns to "Demand" them in their town.
www.eventful.com
www.eventful.com/politics
LEWIS PR for Eventful Louise Tipton, +1-415-992-4400 eventful@lewispr.com
Posted by chris at 11:28 AM
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January 02, 2008
We're Four Years Old!
Hard to believe, four years have passed since Eventful, Inc. was founded in my kitchen on January 1st, 2004. The company was originally called EVDB, Inc. simply because I was able to get the EVDB.com domain but wasn't yet willing to spend $888 to get eventful.com (that would come 18 months later and by then cost a lot more than $888).
Today we have roughly 35 employees, and four and a half million users, soon to pass five million. We've indexed over ten million event listings since 2004. There are 1.2 million Demands for events via the Eventful Demand feature. We have over 90,000 performer records in the Performers database.
2008 will be the most exciting year for Eventful yet!
Posted by brian at 07:37 AM
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