The Advocacy Playbook · Series

How to Fill an Event:
The Advocacy-Driven Attendance Playbook

You can buy your first attendees. You earn the next 30%+ by making every participant want to share.

6 min read + interactive simulator · The pillar guide to the full series
Updated June 2026

Fill the room: play it out

That 30% isn't a hopeful round-up - it's a budgeting outcome, and you can pressure-test it yourself in about a minute. Don't take it on faith. Make the calls below and watch how cheaply you can sell out - the model runs on stated planning rates, so distrust any you like and check them against your own numbers. (Ads charge ~$200 a seat; advocacy is where the margin is.)

Fill the Room
Setup

Your room is empty. Fill it.

You make the acquisition calls; every new group you bring in then shares, and that compounds. Watch two rooms race to full. First: how big is it?

🎯 Goal: sell out for the lowest cost per seat
Illustrative game: paid seats cost ~$200 each; each new batch then shares at no extra spend. Share rates shown are what a well-run advocacy program reaches - above the typical type average in the breakdown below (top events hit 50-89%); downstream visit and register rates are illustrative. One registration = one seat - apply your show rate for real planning.

The best part: most of that growth is nearly free. A registration a participant refers costs about $25 (the simulation above even lands lower); bought cold through blended paid ads, that same seat runs about $200 - roughly 8× more - and the paid one converts worse, because no peer vouched for it.

Where those figures come from: the $25 referred registration is an independent benchmark (Sopro 2025). The ~$200/seat is our blended planning rate for cold paid channels - swap in your own paid cost-per-registration if you track it. A single paid LinkedIn lead benchmarks near $408 (Sopro 2025) - and a lead still has to convert into a registration.

Why it works: people trust people. About 88% of people trust a recommendation from someone they know more than any advertising (Nielsen), and a post from a person reliably out-reaches the same message from a brand page.

Forecast this for your event →See it run on a real event →Or keep reading - the framework below is the order of operations.

The 4-Step Starting Framework

The simulator makes the case; this is the order of operations behind it. Most teams start by booking ads - wrong order. Start with your number, your budget, and your channel mix, then build the advocacy engine on top.

1

Set the target

Pick your attendee goal and work backwards. Registrations needed = target ÷ registration-to-attendance rate. Plan ~50-70% show rate for in-person B2B; 30-45% for webinars.

2

Map your channels

Owned (email, organic social, WhatsApp), paid (LinkedIn, Meta, search), and earned/advocacy (speakers, attendees, exhibitors, sponsors). Full breakdown in the channel map.

3

Forecast attendees per channel

Registrations from a channel = channel spend ÷ CAC(channel). Sum the paid base, then compute blended CAC. The math lives in the budget formula.

4

Layer the advocacy engine

Multiply the paid base by 30%+ for near-zero marginal cost by turning every participant into a sharer - start with the advocacy engine, then the per-stakeholder playbooks for speakers, attendees and exhibitors & sponsors.

The Advocacy Engine: Where 30% Comes From

Step 4 is where the leverage is, so it's worth zooming in. Advocacy is a channel with a budget (tooling + incentives + someone's time), not "nice-to-have buzz." Give it a target like any other channel. Start with what the room actually does - the share of attendees who share, by event type:

What share of your attendees become advocates?

Real data

Pick your event type to see the average advocate rate organizers running that kind of event see on Premagic. A well-run advocacy program (like the simulator above) pushes higher.

17.8%
of attendees become advocates

At a Summit event, roughly 18 in 100 of your room shares on average - based on 54 events of this type.

Read this as the floor, not the ceiling. It's a point-in-time snapshot of average performance - the lower end - and these rates keep climbing as advocacy programs mature. Run it well and you land well above the average (the best events hit 50-89%).

These are averages; well-run and best-performing events turn 50-89% of the room into advocates.

Premagic data · 366 events · Oct 2025+

That's the input - the share of the room that shares. Advocacy's share of your registrations runs higher, because each share reaches a new network and brings in people who weren't in the room yet:

~1-in-3

chance each attendee share generates a new registration (≈ 7% attendance lift).

Vendor · Premagic
+40%

more event registrations from speaker-shared posters.

Vendor · Premagic
~1-in-5

network invites register off the referral alone.

Vendor · Premagic

How to read these: directional first-party estimates from events run on Premagic (hence the "Vendor" tag), not a controlled study. "A share generates a registration" means a new person registered after arriving from that shared poster link. Treat them as planning ranges and swap in your own once you can measure them.

Same reason as before, applied per stakeholder: about 88% of people trust a recommendation from someone they know more than any advertising (Nielsen), and a post from a person reliably out-reaches the same message from a brand page.

The 5 mechanics common to every advocate group

  1. Give them ready-made, personalized content (not "please share").
  2. Make sharing one click, mobile-first, multi-platform.
  3. Track who posted and who didn't.
  4. Nudge non-sharers on a schedule across email + WhatsApp/SMS.
  5. Attribute registrations back to each advocate.

The Full Series

Those five mechanics play out differently for a speaker, an attendee, or a sponsor - and that's what the rest of the series is for. This pillar is the map; each post below goes deep on one part of the engine.

Want the design side of advocacy posters? See our deep dive on designing share-worthy event posters.

You don't run this alone

The engine runs itself, but it still needs an owner - someone watching segments, content, nudges and tracking, because an advocacy engine is only as good as the person tending it. With Premagic you get a dedicated success manager who runs the program with you - building the campaigns, setting the nudge cadence, watching who's sharing, and tuning toward your registration target.

  • Campaigns and assets set up for every stakeholder group
  • Share tracking and scheduled nudges run for you
  • Weekly check-ins on registrations and what to adjust

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to fill an event?+

As planning figures: cold paid ads run about $200 per registration blended across channels - that's our planning rate from events run on Premagic, and a LinkedIn lead alone benchmarks near $408 (Sopro 2025). A registration referred by an existing participant benchmarks around $25 (Sopro 2025), and advocacy registrations carry near-zero marginal cost once the program is running. Swap in your own historical cost-per-registration wherever you have it.

How many of my attendees can advocacy realistically drive?+

Plan for 30%+ of total attendees to come from advocacy - speakers, attendees, exhibitors and sponsors sharing to their own networks. It compounds over the run-up as each new registrant also shares.

How do I prove advocacy's ROI to my boss or CFO?+

Report four numbers: the ad spend you avoided (advocacy registrations times what they'd have cost on paid), the drop in your blended cost-per-registration, the earned-media value of all the sharing, and - the one that ends the debate - registrations attributed to named advocates rather than a modeled estimate. Because every share and sign-up ties back to a participant, advocacy is one of the few channels you can actually prove after the event, not just before. The budget formula walks through the exact math.

Does advocacy work for my type of event?+

It works best where attendees have a professional reason to be seen there - conferences, trade shows, B2B summits, and association or community events. The more of your room shares from a work identity (speakers, exhibitor teams, sponsors), the harder advocacy pulls. Consumer and purely social events still benefit, but lean more on attendee FOMO than professional reach.

How much of my team's time does this take to run?+

Most of the engine is automated: a personalized asset is generated for each participant, share prompts and reminders fire on a schedule across email and WhatsApp/SMS, and every share is tracked and attributed - no one chases people manually. Your team's real work is the setup (segments, content, nudge cadence) plus a weekly check on who's sharing. On the managed plan a success manager handles even that.

What show rate should I plan for?+

Roughly 50-70% of registrations show up for in-person B2B events, and 30-45% for webinars. Work backwards from your attendee goal: registrations needed = target / show rate.

Where should I start?+

Set your attendee target, map your owned, paid and earned channels, forecast registrations per channel, then layer the advocacy engine on top. The deep-dive posts in the series cover each step.

Do I have to run the advocacy program myself?+

No. With Premagic a dedicated success manager builds the campaigns, sets the nudge cadence, tracks who is sharing, and tunes the program toward your registration target.

Your next three moves

You've got the model, the four steps, and the answers to the usual objections - now use it. Keep the full playbook for reference, generate your plan with AI, then put real numbers on it.

Plan with AI
Turn this playbook into your event's plan
Open ChatGPT or Claude with a strategist prompt built from this playbook. Answer four quick questions and get a 10-week advocacy plan for your own event in about 30 seconds.
Copy gives you the full prompt for any AI tool. The buttons open a shorter version so it fits in the link.

Put real numbers on it

The third move, three ways: forecast what advocacy can drive for your own event, pressure-test your assumptions against the benchmarks, or watch the whole engine run live on a real event.