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Events are your startup’s secret weapon

“Events are a waste of time and money.”

Spend enough time in public relations, and you’ll inevitably hear a founder (or three) say this almost verbatim. I wasn’t surprised the last time it happened, but I didn’t have a convincing counterargument ready to go at the time. 

Many founders, especially those running early- and growth-stage startups, consider events a bit frivolous. It’s not an uncommon opinion, as it aligns with the overarching mindset of an ecosystem obsessed with short-term KPIs and instant feedback loops. Events don’t always yield immediate results that can be definitively quantified and plugged into a spreadsheet. Small teams therefore end up with the impression that events don’t deliver value.

But the cost-benefit analysis here is skewed. For startups with good strategy and timing, events can simultaneously drive outcomes across PR, sales, fundraising, partnerships, hiring and positioning.

The point of any given event isn’t only the pithy insights or ego boost of a keynote speech. The aim is to bring a critical mass of relevant stakeholders to one space, and give them a ready excuse to form genuine relationships. 

Approached with the right mindset, events not only have the potential to yield promising leads, they spark connections that can shape a startup’s trajectory and define its future. 

Let’s see how this works.

Most startups are underprepared

First, a disclaimer: Not every startup is ready for events. 

If you’re still figuring out your product, lack a clear narrative, or find yourself drowning operationally, stay home. Events require attention, clear objectives and time. Come back when you have those.

Funnily enough, in my experience, the founders who pushed back the hardest on events were usually in charge of event-ready startups. Their resistance didn’t stem from a feeling of unpreparedness; instead, they had either previously attended the wrong events or been to the right events but failed to reap the benefits. 

You require a strategy to make the most of an event. Attending a 10,000-person mega-conference without booking any meetings, having no aligned messaging, and no follow-up plan will lead to disappointment. Underpreparedness leads to poor execution, and that’s not the event’s fault.

Another stumbling block is thinking 10,000-person mega-conferences are the only game in town. Events come in all shapes and forms — they can be big or small; focused or generalized; some emphasize networking, while others focus on industry-specific insights; the list goes on. There’s an event for any vertical or function where the right people can meet face to face. Selecting the right event is half the battle.

The real work begins once you’ve done that. We’ve worked with several small teams who nailed their conference involvement by treating it like a campaign. They identified who to meet, practiced what to say, and spent time deciding which assets to bring. 

The results were real: New media relationships, friendly intros to investors, and even commercial conversations kicked off right there in the hall. We helped a client get ready for Money20/20 earlier this summer, and they came back calling it the most valuable three days they’d had all year. In 72 hours, they’d connected with multiple journalists, VCs, and prospective clients. 

Cold emails can’t do that.

Getting in the room will always beat landing in the inbox

Everyone sends cold emails; we’re all in someone’s DMs; the chase for eyeballs online is pervasive. Events let you skip the queue.

Meet someone once, even briefly, and that encounter can stick in a way no email will. A journalist, investor or potential partner now knows you’re a real person. 

It sounds repetitive, yes, but putting a face to a name makes a huge difference. It completely changes the dynamic the next time you get in touch, should your name pop up in their inbox. This is why people prioritize following up with people they met at a conference.

Things can move much faster than that, too. We once ran into an off-duty event organizer at a conference who was booking speakers for her own event, so we introduced her to a founder we support. They struck up a conversation, and the organizer ended up booking our client for a keynote. Another client was introduced to a podcast host over lunch; by dinnertime, they’d already recorded an episode. 

Events are accelerants for compounding relationships that drive long-term outcomes. Those small wins (like podcast guest spots) that events foster can be partially credited with that acceleration.

Events can multiply PR impact

Events are media microsystems. Journalists attend them; podcasters show up ready to record; niche publications, newsletters, and analysts come in search of new stories and insight.

Have you ever met someone casually who later became a lifelong, unexpected ally? This happens all the time at events. The co-founders of one startup we work with — currently among the fastest-growing startups in their home country — met in passing at an event in the U.S. On the PR side, you may find that the journalist moderating your panel or fireside chat takes an interest in you or your company. 

I’m not saying everyone will become friends. But warm, professional relationships tend to create more visibility and consideration in future interactions with your brand (and, in some cases, more interviews and fireside chats). The relationship between late TechCrunch journalist Steve O’Hear and Monzo founder Tom Blomfield is a textbook example of this.

For one of our bigger clients, event activations coupled with guerrilla marketing and side events in key cities are central to their marketing strategy. They go big to create buzz that drives people who fit their customer profile to join fun activities. This creates great content, and allows their leaders to meet customers. Journalists are invited to these experiences, too.

There’s no magic involved. Everyone relevant is already there. You show up with something worth seeing or saying. That’s it.

Events have a compounding effect

Much like consistent earned media or a strong newsletter, showing up repeatedly in a relevant way builds familiarity. You go from being a person someone met once to a person they know

You’ll start hearing things like, “I saw you speak at a couple of events,” or, “I know you speak regularly about XYZ.” 

These make for great conversation starters, attract the right type of contact, and take conversations in a productive direction faster. And don’t get me started on future pitches for speaking opportunities, podcasts and recorded interviews. Having a track record always adds credibility and makes your pitch punchier.

An audience’s attention isn’t only trained on the speaker onstage, but also on the event’s social media accounts and newsletters. Speaking at events reaches far beyond the people in the chairs. Most events are recorded, so engagement doesn’t end once the event does. 

Recorded sessions add great validation points into the middle of the funnel and improve your YouTube SEO. There’s virtually no downside.

Events aren’t a silver bullet

If your team is still too early, too stretched, or too shaky on its core messaging, events probably won’t work for you. Yet. 

For startups, an event will be just as fruitful as the work you put into it. The right event (attended with the right mindset) will deliver high-impact connections even if, for instance, your product isn’t perfectly fine-tuned. With clarity, preparation, and follow-through, events can help you cut through noise, accelerate relationships, build credibility, and create opportunities that simply won’t happen online.

To be clear, you need to be more than just a warm body. But strategies for succeeding at events are the topic for another blog post.

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The founders behind NUAGE, the sugar-free cotton candy rated Nutri-Score A, share their playbook for event strategy, budget, and pipeline ROI. If you’ve walked the aisles of a French food trade show recently, chances are you’ve seen — or tasted — a small cloud of the impossible: cotton candy with zero sugar and a Nutri-Score A. Behind it is Re.Snack, a startup founded in 2023 near Dijon by Vanessa and Florian, on a mission to reinvent confectionery. Their first product, NUAGE, is built on Sucr’A, a proprietary sugar substitute developed with AgroSup Dijon that uses plant fibres (isomalt and inulin) to recreate cotton candy’s signature melt-in-the-mouth texture — without sugar, allergens, colourants, or preservatives. The traction speaks for itself: revenue up from €200K to €7M in two years, distribution from 100 to 5,000 points of sale, more than 15,000 online orders, national TV exposure on M6 — and a reported acquisition offer from Lindt that the founders turned down. They’d rather build a brand than become a subcontractor. A sugar-free, fat-free popcorn is next. But what caught our attention is how they grew. For Re.Snack, trade shows aren’t a marketing expense — they’re the core of the sales machine, with a dedicated budget, pipeline targets, and hard ROI thresholds. So we sat down with the team and asked the five questions every founder should be able to answer about their event strategy. Sesamers: Let’s start with the basics. What role do events play in your sales motion — sourcing net-new pipeline, accelerating open deals, or closing? Re.Snack: Events are our number one growth channel. They generate new business, strengthen relationships with existing customers, and accelerate ongoing opportunities. In the food industry, people buy products, but they also buy the team behind them. Face-to-face interactions build trust much faster than emails or calls. That’s a big claim — number one channel. Does the budget reflect it? What share of your sales & marketing spend goes to events, and what target does it carry? Around 25% of our sales and marketing budget is dedicated to events. We consider them a strategic investment rather than a communication expense. Our objective is that every euro invested generates multiple times its value in qualified commercial opportunities over the following 12 months. Twelve months is a patient window. When you look across the whole portfolio of events, what does the blended pipeline ROI actually come out to? On average, we generate between 8x and 12x pipeline ROI across our major trade shows. Some flagship events, such as SIAL or ISM, can significantly outperform that because they concentrate the world’s key retail buyers in one place. Meetings are easy to count, revenue less so. Which events actually convert — not just into conversations, but into business? The events that convert best are those attended by decision-makers with active buying projects. For us, SIAL Paris, ISM, Snack Show, and major retail buying conventions consistently generate tangible business. Success isn’t measured by the number of meetings, but by the quality of follow-up and execution afterwards. Last one on the numbers: at what point do you decide an event has earned a bigger budget? What’s your threshold for scaling up? We increase investment once an event consistently delivers at least a 5x pipeline ROI and proves it can generate repeatable business over multiple editions. We look at long-term customer value rather than immediate sales, because retail cycles can take several months. Before we let you go — for the food founders reading this, what would be your top 5 events? My top five would be: What founders should take from this Beneath the answers sits a playbook any startup can copy, whatever the industry. Events have a job description. 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The industry’s reference dataset on exhibitor spending had not been refreshed since 2017. Read that again: the largest B2B marketing channel went eight years without updated benchmarks. The exhibitor side confirms the fog. Vendelux’s 2026 B2B Events Survey of 120+ marketing and events leaders found that 86 percent can’t accurately attribute ROI to events, and 98 percent struggle to justify event spend to leadership. Yet 80 percent are maintaining or growing their sponsorships anyway.  Organizers benefit from this fog. Some only release their data points after the event is over, when your booking decision for next year is already locked in early-bird pricing. Others share nothing beyond the headline number. Try asking for the seniority breakdown of last edition’s visitors, or the ratio of buyers to service providers walking the aisles. I wrote before that founders systematically underestimate what events cost them, hence my 2:1 preparation rule. The other side of that equation is just as broken: they can’t estimate what events return, because the data to do so is withheld. The GDPR excuse When pushed, some organizers invoke GDPR as the reason they can’t share more. Let’s be precise. GDPR restricts sharing personal data: names, emails, badge scans tied to individuals. It says nothing about aggregated, anonymized statistics. “42 percent of our visitors have purchasing authority” contains zero personal data. An organizer who can’t tell you that either doesn’t know it or doesn’t want you to know it. Neither answer is reassuring. If startups are solving it, ask why organizers aren’t A whole category of companies now exists to answer a question organizers could answer themselves: was this event worth it? Full disclosure: at Sesamers we’re building mytradeshow.ai on this exact gap, so I have a horse in this race. Here are five others working the same seam: Sit with the logic for a second. 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