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Event day. Finally. The one day you’ve spent months planning.
But then there’s a room your exhibitor can’t get into. No one unlocked it. So they’re just standing in the hallway with a booth full of equipment…waiting.
Across the venue, a badge printer is jamming every third print. Turns out no one ran a test.
And when the AV cuts out mid-welcome address, the staff member nearest the booth doesn’t know who to call. So he calls the person next to him, who calls someone else, and now three people are standing around a podium mic while the room watches.
That’s all it takes to go from a smooth event to a firefighting exercise.
This checklist is designed to prevent that.
Built from the real-world experience of event planners who’ve been in the trenches, managing everything from intimate workshops to large-scale expos. They share their rituals, hard-learned lessons, and specific checks that have saved them when it mattered most.
Before the deep dives begin, run through these first. These are the big-picture checks. The 10 things that, if wrong, will blow up your whole day.
Note: This isn’t a solo mental exercise. Confirm these verbally with your team leads to avoid mistakes and guarantee everyone’s on the same page.
Apart from these 10 non-negotiables, here’s what Emily Dilbeck, Senior Manager, Global Events at JustCall, does as part of her mandatory pre-event ritual,
Next up: The nitty-gritties of event planning. Each section below covers a specific area of onsite execution, followed by the checklist itself.
If the venue isn’t physically ready, nothing else on this list matters. Wrong room layouts and locked doors aren’t fixable with great staffing or clever technology.
Check-in and badge printing are the first things attendees experience. A fast, frictionless entry sets the tone for the day. A slow, chaotic one is hard to recover from.
Bad audio and a blank projector screen can kill a session’s momentum in seconds. Every room needs to be tested, not just the main stage.
Speakers are often managing nerves, travel fatigue, and last-minute slide changes all at once. Your job is to make sure none of that becomes a problem on the main stage.
Sponsors and exhibitors are paying partners. How the event day feels to them directly affects future renewal conversations, referrals, and your reputation in the market.
When shifting from event organizer to exhibitor at third-party conferences, here’s what Emily Dilbeck locks in before attendee doors open:
Use her list as a mini check for what your exhibitors are likely to prioritize on their end, too.
Logistics get people in the door. This layer is what makes them glad they came. Every touchpoint here should feel intentional. Martin Fretwell, Co-Founder of Event Driven Growth, learned this the hard way:
Hungry, under-caffeinated attendees notice when coffee runs out. So do attendees whose dietary needs weren’t accounted for. F&B logistics may feel like background work, but they affect how people feel about your event all day.
Your team is your execution layer. If they’re unclear on roles, communication channels, or what to do when things go wrong, no checklist will save you.
While you’re confirming everyone else’s readiness, there’s one person most event planners forget to check in on. According to Martin Fretwell, it’s also the most underinvested area in event planning.
The takeaway? Your pre-event ritual should be part of this checklist, too.
Nobody wants to use this section. But everyone needs to have it covered.
Printing this checklist and handing it around is the easy part. Getting your team to actually put it to work is where most events struggle. Here’s how to build a system around it.
We’d suggest you assign each section to a single owner and require confirmation before doors open. Not individual items, the whole section.
The more you treat this as a team exercise rather than a personal to-do list, the smoother your morning gets.
Your checklist and your run of show are two different things, and you need both.
Practically speaking, this means your checklist gets signed off before doors open. Then your run of show takes over. The two documents run in sequence, not in parallel.
To save time, use the vFairs AI-powered Run of Show Generator. Add your event details, customize template sections as needed, and create a ready-to-edit timeline.
Not every event needs every item on this list. A 200-person field event with a small team will naturally merge roles and skip checks that aren’t relevant. A 5,000-person conference might assign each section to a dedicated lead with their own sub-checklist on top of this master one.
The principle stays the same regardless of scale: Someone owns it, someone confirms it, and nothing gets assumed.
For events running two days or more, treat this as your Day 1 master checklist.
On Day 2 and beyond, run only the sections that reset overnight:
The rest can carry over unless something has changed in your event timeline, programming, or logistics.
And before you leave the venue each night, go through the list with your team leads. Mark items as “carry-over confirmed” or “needs re-check.” That conversation is where Day 2 problems get caught before they actually become Day 2 problems.
The right on-site platform, like vFairs, quietly removes a significant chunk of this checklist from your morning. When registration data flows directly into your check-in tools, you’re not manually syncing spreadsheets. When badge printing is integrated with your attendee database, test prints become a two-minute task instead of a thirty-minute troubleshooting session.
Real-time visibility matters too. A live event dashboard shows you check-in numbers, badge printing status, and attendee flow across every entry point at a glance. If issues come up, staff can flag them through a shared channel, and the right person gets notified immediately, without a chain of phone calls eating up your morning.
Most teams treat each event as a standalone exercise. They get through it, debrief briefly, and then start from scratch the next time. Martin Fretwell thinks differently:
A checklist won’t fix that on its own. But if you treat it as a living document, noting down what broke, what got skipped, and what saved you, it gets better every time. The goal isn’t just to get through today. It’s to build a repeatable system so next time, this morning is easier.
The event planners who have the smoothest event days aren’t the ones who rely on memory, gut instinct, or a chaotic group chat. They’re the ones who did the boring work beforehand: Assigned the owners, ran the tests, confirmed the confirmations.
This checklist consolidates that boring work. Use it, adapt it to your event, and make it a team exercise.
To prepare a checklist for an event, start by defining your event goals, audience, and budget. Then work backward from the event date to build your timeline. Break the checklist into functional areas: Venue, vendors, staffing, AV, catering, and attendee experience. Assign each section an owner, set internal deadlines ahead of actual ones, and review it as a team regularly.
Common pitfalls to avoid on event day include skipping a full AV run-through with speakers, having no backup plan for technical failures, and running a slow manual check-in as the line forms. Beyond logistics, overpacking the agenda, neglecting accessibility needs, and under-communicating with vendors on the day create more friction than planners expect.
An onsite event day checklist is a structured document that event teams use to confirm if everything is operationally ready before attendees arrive. It covers the physical, technical, and logistical layers of your event, including venue setup, check-in, badge printing AV, staff readiness, and more.
At minimum, an onsite event checklist should cover venue readiness, check-in and badge printing setup, AV/technical checks, speaker management, catering, exhibitor and sponsor readiness, staff roles, and safety protocols. The goal is to fully cover every touchpoint an attendee, speaker, or sponsor might encounter during the event.
They answer different questions. The onsite event checklist answers, “Is everything ready?” The run of show answers, “What happens when, and who's responsible?” The two run in sequence, not in parallel. Your event day checklist gets signed off before doors open. Then the run of show takes over.
The most important checks for check-in and badge printing are speed, accuracy, and reliability. Test printers early with multiple prints to catch issues before the queue forms. Confirm badge templates are approved, and attendee data is synced. Have backup hardware powered on and ready. If you're using on-demand printing, verify it's pulling the right data.
Event technology supports onsite event checklists by replacing a major chunk of manual verification with automation. Self-service kiosks, QR code scanners, and mobile check-in apps handle attendee lookup, badge printing, and session tracking. Access control runs automatically by badge tier. Live dashboards give team leads instant visibility into check-in flow and flag bottlenecks.
Amna Bajwa
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