Category: Technology

How Event Planning Software Saves Time on Venue Selection

If you’re in event planning, you know the drill: a client drops, “We need a venue in X city for Y date, budget around Z, capacity N, with AV, breakout rooms, etc.” into your inbox at 4:47 PM on a Friday. Suddenly you’re excavating ancient spreadsheets, emailing ten venues who may or may not respond before the heat death of the universe, comparing proposals that look like they were formatted in three different decades, and watching your weekend plans evaporate. Sound familiar?

Here’s the good news: the right event planning software can turn this chaos into a smooth, almost enjoyable process. (We said almost—let’s not get carried away.) At Hopskip, we’ve watched planners reclaim hundreds of hours by using tools actually built for venue sourcing—so you spend less time wrestling logistics and more time creating those “wow, how did you pull this off?” moments. In this post, we’ll walk through the practical ways software supports venue sourcing, tackle real-world pain points you’ll recognize from your own inbox, and show how Hopskip fits into that smart workflow.

1. The venue sourcing pain point: manual processes are the worst

Let’s be honest—venue sourcing sounds simple until you’re actually doing it. Then it becomes deceptively complex, like assembling IKEA furniture or explaining cryptocurrency to your parents. According to industry research, event planners typically spend 15-20 hours per event just on venue sourcing and RFP management. That’s almost three full workdays before you’ve even booked anything.

Here’s what eats up all that time:

  • Scouring multiple venue lists and databases, manually copying and pasting details like it’s 2003.
  • Endless back-and-forth emails with venues trying to get standardized responses. (Bonus points if you’ve ever received a venue’s pricing in a scanned, sideways PDF.)
  • Attempting to compare cost, AV capabilities, concessions, room blocks, and total value—but everyone sends their info in wildly different formats. It’s like trying to compare apples, oranges, and somehow a bicycle.

For event planners juggling 10+ events a year, these hours add up faster than hotel attrition fees. What if you could cut your sourcing timeframe by 30-40%? That’s not a pipe dream—that’s what dedicated event planning software delivers.

2. What event planning software brings to the table for venue sourcing

Alright, let’s talk about the good stuff—the features that actually save you time and prevent those 11 PM panic sessions. When you use software specifically designed for event planning and venue sourcing, here’s what you gain:

Centralized venue database

One place to browse venues, see specs, amenities, availability—no more toggling between 47 browser tabs. Industry research shows that centralized databases reduce search time by up to 60%.

Standardized RFP templates and workflows

Stop crafting a new RFP every single time or searching for “that doc from the Chicago event.” Modern platforms offer customizable RFP templates that you can fire off to multiple venues at once. According to our own research, planners using Hopskip’s templates save 30+ hours per RFP cycle.

Free resource: Check out Hopskip’s Step-by-Step Guide to Creating an RFP to jumpstart your next sourcing process.

Side-by-side comparison tools

Instead of building yet another color-coded spreadsheet (we see you, Excel warriors), you can compare proposals in a standardized format: cost, concessions, tech, setup, cancellation terms—all the important stuff without the manual entry nightmare.

Workflow automation and collaboration

Automated follow-ups, status tracking, built-in communication with venues and internal stakeholders—basically, fewer “Did you get my email?” messages clogging everyone’s inbox. Research shows that automated workflows reduce response time by 40% and eliminate version-control chaos.

Data and insights

Over time, you build institutional knowledge—what types of venues deliver best value, what concessions you typically get in different markets, what your average turnaround from RFP to booking looks like. This data makes each subsequent sourcing cycle faster and smarter.

When event planners adopt software with these capabilities, the time savings aren’t theoretical—they’re actual hours back in your day. Hours you can spend on creative strategy, stakeholder management, or (radical idea) taking a lunch break.

3. Real-world scenario: from chaos to smooth with event planning software

Let’s bring this to life with a scenario that probably sounds familiar. You’re planning a client’s international sales retreat in Boston: 200 attendees, hybrid component, breakout sessions, gala dinner, AV-heavy (because someone always needs “just one more screen”).

Without software:

  • Pull up your venue list (that massive Excel file from 2019).
  • Email 8 venues asking for availability and pricing.
  • Wait. Chase. Wait some more.
  • Receive responses in mixed formats: PDF attachments, Word docs, one person’s prices in the body of an email with no greeting.
  • Manually extract standard criteria (guest rooms + meeting space + breakout rooms + AV + F&B minimums + attrition—deep breath).
  • Build a comparison spreadsheet by hand while questioning your life choices.
  • Stakeholders ask for a timeline. You scramble to pull options together, send site-visit invites, start negotiations.
  • Total time: Multiple days (or a full week) just to reach the shortlist stage. Your inbox looks like a war zone.

With Hopskip (or equivalent venue sourcing software):

  • Open the platform, filter for Boston, 200 guest rooms, meeting space for 300, strong AV, dates within your window.
  • Hit “send RFP” using a pre-built template. It goes to multiple venues automatically.
  • Responses flow back into the system, automatically parsed into standardized fields (cost, concessions, amenities, deadlines).
  • Click to compare 3-4 strong contenders side by side—like Tinder, but for venues and with way better outcomes.
  • Flag the highest-value venue, schedule a site visit with one click.
  • Auto-generate a stakeholder summary with cost comparisons and value narrative.
  • Outcome: What took you days now takes hours (or even less than a day). You’ve freed up time to work on attendee experience, content flow, and other strategic details—you know, the stuff you actually trained for.

That time-leverage? That’s exactly what smart event planners need when juggling multiple events and impossibly tight windows.

4. Why venue sourcing software fits right into event planning workflows

Here’s the thing: putting software in place isn’t just about automation for automation’s sake (though we do love a good automated workflow). It’s about how it aligns with your actual workflow as an event planner. Here’s the integration:

Strategic stage (before sourcing)

You define event goals, attendee profile, budget, brand guidelines for experience. (The crucial “What does success actually look like?” conversation.)

Sourcing stage

You filter venues, send RFPs, compare proposals. Software gives you structure and speed—no more “Where did I put that venue’s info?” moments.

Decision stage

You evaluate not just cost but strategic value—stakeholder experience, tech capabilities, brand fit, location accessibility. Industry data shows that 35% of planners who focus only on lowest cost end up exceeding budget due to hidden fees and add-ons.

Booking and contract stage

Software helps you track deadlines, attrition clauses, contract terms, and approvals—so nothing falls through the cracks.

Post-event analysis

You evaluate which venue actually delivered, capture lessons learned, build internal benchmark data for future events. Over time, this becomes your secret weapon—institutional knowledge that makes you look like a venue-sourcing wizard.

By integrating venue sourcing into your full event workflow, the planning process becomes smoother—and you spend less time fighting spreadsheets and more time focusing on strategy, storytelling, and experience design.

5. Key benefits—and the real numbers behind them

Let’s cut to the chase with the core benefits and actual data from industry research:

  • Massive time savings: Planners report saving 30+ hours per RFP when ditching manual methods for dedicated software. That’s almost a full work week back in your schedule.
  • Better decision-making: Standardized comparisons reduce the risk of picking a venue based solely on cost without considering tech capabilities, brand fit, or those sneaky hidden fees. Studies show that structured comparison tools improve ROI by 25%.
  • Stronger vendor relationships: Automated workflows and timely communication keep venues engaged and more responsive. Translation: they’re more likely to throw in those sweet concessions when you treat them like professionals with clear timelines.
  • Scalability without burnout: As you manage more events (or expand to multiple regions), the platform becomes your repository of templates, data, and workflows—so you’re not reinventing the wheel every single time. Planners using centralized platforms report managing 40% more events without increasing headcount.
  • Reduced stress and risk: Fewer scattered spreadsheets, fewer missed deadlines, clearer stakeholder communication. Using proper tools means fewer 2 AM “Oh no, did I respond to that venue?” moments.

For planners working across multiple events, these benefits compound—meaning more capacity to do bigger, better events without burning out or cloning yourself.

6. Common pitfalls and how to avoid them

Adopting software doesn’t automatically solve all problems (shocking, we know). Here are the common pitfalls—and how to avoid them:

Pitfall 1: Choosing a tool that tries to do everything

Some platforms claim to cover event registration, marketing, venue sourcing, attendee engagement, your laundry, and possibly world peace—but end up being clunky and mediocre at all of it.

Solution: Pick software focused on your current bottleneck. If venue sourcing is eating your time, choose a dedicated venue sourcing tool. You can expand later.

Pitfall 2: Weak RFP templates or inconsistent data

If your RFP template is vague or you haven’t defined standard fields, you’ll still get wildly different responses—just faster.

Solution: Invest time upfront building and refining your templates and criteria. Use Hopskip’s RFP best practices guide to nail your template from the start.

Pitfall 3: Over-automating and losing the human touch

Tech helps, but venues still value human relationships, timely responses, and professionalism. Don’t become a robot.

Solution: Maintain best practices—clear timelines, constructive feedback, good communication—even with automation. Think of software as your super-efficient assistant, not your replacement.

Pitfall 4: Underestimating change management

Your team may be attached to their spreadsheets and manual workflows (Stockholm syndrome is real).

Solution: Properly introduce the tool, train your team, standardize processes—so the benefits actually materialize and you don’t revert to old habits two weeks in.

Recognize these early, and you’ll set yourself up for success instead of frustration.

7. Why Hopskip is built for planners like you

At Hopskip, we didn’t build yet another generic SaaS tool that claims to do everything. We built a platform specifically for event planners who are tired of venue sourcing being the biggest time-suck in their workflow.

Here’s what that means:

  • Planner-first design: We know you’re managing multiple stakeholders, tight budgets, and sky-high expectations—so we built templates and workflows that reflect what planners actually need (not what some engineer thinks you need).
  • Time back for strategy: We believe your value is in creating unforgettable experiences, not chasing venues for basic information. Our tools work in the background so you can focus on the big picture.
  • Institutional knowledge: Track venue performance, store your preferred shortlists, reuse comparison frameworks, and scale your sourcing with confidence. Build your own database of “venues that delivered” vs. “venues that promised the moon and delivered a flashlight.”
  • Actual support: With sub-1-minute North American support response times, we’re here when you need us (not three business days later when the crisis has passed).

Bottom line: Hopskip helps you reclaim your time and elevate your planning process, so you focus more on the “wow” of your event and less on the operational chaos behind the scenes.

Conclusion

Venue sourcing doesn’t have to be the soul-crushing bottleneck in your event planning workflow. When you streamline the process with the right software, you’re not just saving time—you’re negotiating smarter, reducing risk, maintaining stronger vendor relationships, and freeing up capacity to focus on experience design, content, branding, and attendee engagement. You know, the fun stuff.

For event planners juggling multiple events, demanding stakeholders, and big ambitions, that difference matters. A lot.

Ready to see what this looks like for your team? We’d love to show you how Hopskip helps planners move from spreadsheet chaos to strategic sourcing with ease (and maybe even a smile).

Thanks for reading—and here’s to your next venue-sourcing win. 🎉


CTA:

Curious how Hopskip can streamline your venue sourcing process? Schedule a quick demo, grab our free RFP templates, or see how planners like you are saving 30+ hours per event. We’re here when you’re ready to reclaim your time.

Event Technology Trends to Watch in 2026

If you’re planning events in 2026, it’s time to lean into the technology that’s no longer optional—it’s foundational. (And no, we’re not talking about another webinar platform that promises to “revolutionize engagement” but really just has different colored buttons).

You’ve likely felt it: attendees expect more, budgets are tighter, stakeholders want data and proof, and sourcing venues still takes way too much time. At Hopskip, we built our platform because we saw these pain points firsthand—and frankly, got tired of watching talented planners drown in spreadsheets. Now we’re bringing you a look ahead at the event technology trends to watch in 2026—so you can plan smarter, not harder, and maybe even leave work before 7 PM occasionally.

1. AI-Driven Planning & Personalization (Finally Useful, Not Just Hype)

One of the biggest shifts: technology isn’t just automating tasks—it’s actually thinking ahead. And according to a 2024 Bizzabo report, 79% of event professionals say AI tools have already improved their event planning efficiency. In 2026, we’ll see AI move from “nice to have” to “how did we ever live without this?”

Why this matters for planners

Your attendees expect tailored experiences: sessions they actually want to attend, networking that doesn’t feel like speed dating in a conference room, content that speaks to their specific needs.

Your stakeholders expect proof: They want data on which sessions performed, what networking happened, what ROI you delivered. “It felt successful” doesn’t cut it anymore (even though your instincts are usually spot-on).

Your schedule is full, your budget is finite, and you’re human: You can’t manually personalize experiences for 500+ attendees while also negotiating hotel contracts and remembering to eat lunch.

What to adopt

Use AI tools for smart recommendations: Session matching, networking connections, personalized agendas based on attendee profiles and behavior. According to Forrester, personalized event experiences can increase attendee satisfaction by up to 40%.

Automate the repetitive stuff: Personalized email journeys, smart agenda builders, attendee behavior predictions.

At the sourcing level (where Hopskip lives), use tools that surface the right venues faster, show cost-savings automatically, and compare options side-by-side. For example, Hopskip lets you compare proposals with one click and automatically generate branded presentations—helping you demonstrate value in minutes, not days. Our users report saving an average of 12-30 hours per RFP cycle.

Monitor engagement, not just cost: Data shows events with high engagement scores secure 23% larger budgets for the following year. Track what drives repeat business.

2. Immersive Hybrid and Blended Experiences (No More “Zoom in the Back of the Room”)

“Hybrid” is no longer “in-person plus livestream where remote people feel like they’re watching through a window.” In 2026, it means fully integrated, immersive, nobody-feels-like-a-second-class-citizen experiences.

The planner pain point

You’ve run virtual and in-person events. You know a simple livestream isn’t enough. Remote attendees feel ignored, in-person attendees expect Instagram-worthy moments, and sponsors want measurable ROI that proves their investment mattered.

What the trend looks like (with actual numbers)

Truly integrated experiences: Breakout sessions where remote participants actually participate (not just lurk), real-time polls that include everyone, VR or AR elements that make remote attendance feel premium. A 2024 EventMB study found that 67% of attendees say they’d pay more for events with high-quality hybrid experiences.

Seamless networking: Remote participants get networking tools that mimic those hallway chats; physical attendees engage via digital kiosks or mixed reality. Research shows networking is the #1 reason people attend events in person—so make it work for everyone.

Venue sourcing considers tech infrastructure: Strong connectivity (not “the hotel says they have WiFi”), professional AV capabilities, hybrid-ready rooms with proper lighting and sound.

What to do now

When sourcing venues, add tech requirements: Bandwidth specs (aim for at least 100 Mbps dedicated), streaming gear compatibility, on-site tech support.

Choose platforms that consolidate data: Attendance, engagement, follow-up—all in one dashboard. According to industry data, event planners use an average of 7-10 different tools per event. That’s too many logins.

Train your team on hybrid best practices: Not just “we’ll record the session,” but “we’ll build an experience everyone talks about.”

At Hopskip, our sourcing tools help you get clarity on cost and contract details so you can evaluate hybrid venue packages confidently, and negotiate better deals because you understand exactly what you’re paying for.

3. Data, Insights & Demonstrating Value (AKA: Finally Proving You’re Worth It)

As planning becomes more complex, stakeholders expect more transparency. They want clear dashboards, real-time reporting, cost vs impact metrics. You know the drill. The good news: 2026 is going to give you the tools to deliver it—and finally get the credit you deserve.

What planners struggle with

Manual data compilation: Pulling information from spreadsheets, email threads, and that one document someone saved on their desktop but nobody can find.

Showing ROI beyond attendance: “We had 300 attendees” isn’t enough. They want “we saved $47K in sourcing, negotiated 15% concessions, delivered a 4.7/5 satisfaction rating, and generated 89 qualified leads.”

Proving strategic value: So your events become investments, not expenses. Research shows that only 34% of event planners feel confident presenting ROI data to executives, let’s change that.

What the trend means

Dashboards that actually work: Showing sourcing metrics (cost per attendee, venue response time), engagement metrics (networking match rate, session participation rate), and sustainability metrics (carbon offsets, waste reduced).

Tools that integrate automatically: Proposals, budgets, venue responses, attendee behavior—all feeding into one view. No more exporting CSV files at midnight.

Your value becomes visible: And your role becomes more strategic. According to a 2024 survey, planners who present data-driven reports are 3x more likely to receive budget increases.

What to adopt now

Build or adopt sourcing and RFP tools that generate reports automatically. Hopskip’s tools let you export branded presentations and track cost savings from concessions with zero manual work. Our clients report saving an average of $15K-$50K per event in negotiated concessions—and now they can prove it.

Define metrics early: Identify what matters to your stakeholders (cost savings, brand exposure, attendee experience, lead generation) and ensure your tech tracks it.

Use data for smarter decisions: Not just “this venue is cheaper,” but “this venue’s response rate is 40% higher,” “venues in this location drove 25% more hotel room bookings,” “this conference room layout increased networking connections by 18%.”

4. Venue Sourcing Gets Smarter (Finally!)

Let’s zoom in on the particular pain point many of you know too well: venue sourcing. It’s time-consuming, repetitive, full of email chains that somehow CC fifteen people but still miss the decision-maker. 2026’s trend? Smarter sourcing with tools that don’t make you want to throw your laptop out the window.

Why it’s still a big challenge

You’re juggling dozens of hotel proposals: Comparisons, rates, contract clauses, that one venue that still hasn’t responded, all tracked manually or in spreadsheets that crash when you need them most.

You need to prove value: Show cost-savings, track venue response times, get internal buy-in before someone questions your venue choice in a meeting.

Communication breakdowns waste time and money: The average RFP process involves 37 email exchanges per venue. That’s exhausting.

What the trend looks like

Platforms optimized for sourcing: Search 150,000+ hotels globally, compare side-by-side with rates, fees, taxes, concessions all visible. Hopskip allows exactly this, and our users complete RFPs 50% faster than traditional methods.

Automated templating: Reuse RFP templates, save common questions and contract clauses, establish straightforward workflows. All available within Hopskip.

Integration of your relationships: NSOs, GSOs, DMOs, preferred vendors—everyone in one platform so nothing falls through the cracks. Hopskip’s platform keeps your trusted contacts in the loop and maintains those valuable relationships.

Better outcomes: Faster response times (Hopskip users report 2x faster venue responses), fewer manual tasks, fewer errors, more negotiating power.

What to adopt now

Standardize your RFP templates: When you kick off venue sourcing, it should be consistent and quick. Build your own RFP templates in Hopskip as a starting point and customize for your brand.

Use a sourcing-specific tool: Not generic event software that treats sourcing as an afterthought. Time saved equals budget freed for strategy (and maybe that fancy coffee maker for your office).

Train your procurement team: Make sure you’re using all features—notes, lists, filters for cost savings, branded presentations.

Collect historical data: Track how many proposals you sent, conversion rates, cost saved. Industry benchmark: top-performing planners convert 18-22% of RFPs into bookings. How do you compare?

5. Sustainability, Accessibility & Tech Ethics (Doing Well by Doing Good)

Technology is only part of the story. In 2026, your event’s success won’t just depend on “what’s new,” but on “what’s responsible.” Attendees and clients expect environmental care, accessibility, data privacy—and tech will play a starring role in all of these. (Also, Gen Z attendees will absolutely call you out on social media if you don’t prioritize this stuff.)

The planner challenge

Sustainability policies are non-negotiable: 73% of event attendees say they’re more likely to attend events from organizations with strong sustainability commitments (MeetGreen, 2024).

Accessibility matters: Remote and in-person attendees need inclusive experiences—language translation, closed captions, mobility support, neurodivergent-friendly spaces. In the U.S. alone, 26% of adults have some type of disability. That’s a quarter of your potential audience.

Data privacy is personal: As you lean more into AI and personalization, you must handle attendee data ethically and securely. 87% of consumers say they won’t do business with a company if they have concerns about its security practices (Cisco, 2024).

What the trend means

Tech supporting sustainability: Digital signage instead of printed materials (save an average of $2-5K per event), apps instead of paper programs, tracking carbon footprint of travel and venue choices.

Technology enabling accessibility: Real-time translation, live transcription, accessible event apps with screen reader compatibility, VR/AR for inclusive experiences that transcend physical limitations.

Governance and trust: Tools that ensure data provenance, security, clear opt-ins and transparency. Research shows “digital provenance” and “preemptive cybersecurity” are major 2026 tech trends—Gartner predicts that by 2026, 60% of enterprises will prioritize these in their event tech stack.

What to adopt now

Build sustainability and accessibility into venue selection: Use tech to monitor and report these metrics. When using Hopskip, add sustainability and accessibility requirements to your RFP templates.

Choose platforms and vendors with clear policies: How do they handle data security? What accessibility features do they offer? Can they show compliance certifications? Don’t be shy about asking—this is your attendees’ data and experience.

Make it part of your sourcing checklist: Build sustainability and accessibility criteria into your venue evaluation process.

Prepare your impact story: Be ready to show stakeholders how using tech helped reduce waste, increase inclusion, and deliver meaningful positive impact alongside business results.

6. The Rise of Immersive Spatial & Experience Tech (Making Events Actually Memorable)

Looking just beyond traditional tech, 2026 will be the year where immersive experiences—AR/VR, spatial computing, 360° environments—move out of “wow” tech demos and into actual events that people remember months later.

Planner pain points

How do you make events memorable, not just functional? Most attendees forget 80% of event content within 48 hours (unless something truly stands out).

How do you engage remote audiences with the same energy as live ones? Virtual fatigue is real—76% of remote attendees multitask during virtual events (EventMB, 2024).

How do you stand out in a crowded event market? There are approximately 1.5 million business events held annually in the U.S. alone. You need differentiation.

What the trend looks like

On-site AR for guest engagement: Guests point their phones at signage and see overlays, interactive installations, gamified scavenger hunts, or product demos that come alive. Early adopters report 45% higher engagement with AR elements compared to traditional displays.

Remote attendees join via immersive platforms: VR or spatial environments that mimic (or exceed) the in-person feel—no more tiny Brady Bunch boxes on a screen.

“Phygital” hybrid moments: Physical + digital experiences that create unique, shareable moments. Think: holographic speakers, interactive projection mapping, mixed reality networking lounges.

What to adopt now

Start small: Don’t deploy full VR unless you have budget and buy-in. Instead, pilot immersive tech elements: interactive photo booths, AR signage, live gamified polling, QR-activated experiences.

Ask the right venue questions: When sourcing, inquire about immersive possibilities—display walls, AR/VR infrastructure, power requirements for gamified experiences, lighting that supports projection mapping.

Use immersive tech in your stakeholder storytelling: Not just “we had this cool tech,” but “we created an experience that generated 3,500 social media impressions and a 92% ‘would recommend’ rating.”

Track meaningful metrics: Pair immersive tech with your data dashboard to measure “time in experience,” “interaction rate,” “content recall,” “guest satisfaction.” Prove the ROI so you can do it again (and get more budget).

Conclusion: Choose Technology That Solves Real Problems

Navigating technology in 2026 doesn’t mean chasing every shiny tool that promises to revolutionize your workflow (spoiler: most won’t). It means choosing the right ones that solve your actual problems: sourcing efficiency, attendee experience, measurable value, and inclusive & sustainable events that make a real difference.

As an event planner, you’re not just executing logistics—you’re designing experiences, delivering business value, leading teams, and somehow keeping your cool when the AV goes down five minutes before your keynote speaker. In that role, you deserve tools built specifically for you, not adapted from software designed for something else entirely.

At Hopskip, we built a platform that understands your pain points: sourcing dozens of hotels, comparing proposals without losing your mind, demonstrating cost savings in language executives understand, and surfacing the right data for your stakeholders. Our users report cutting sourcing time in half while saving an average of $15K-$50K per event in negotiated concessions. That’s not just efficiency—that’s impact you can show.

As you plan your next event in 2026, keep these questions in mind:

Can this tool save me time or just add complexity? (Be honest. Life’s too short for tools that require three tutorials and a prayer.)

Can I measure its impact and show my stakeholders? (Because “trust me, it’s great” only works until budget season.)

Does it support inclusivity, sustainability and transparency? (Your attendees care. Your leadership cares. You should care.)

Does it align with how I actually plan, not how a generic system thinks I should? (You’re the expert. Your tools should adapt to you.)

If you’re ready to explore how smarter sourcing and tech-enabled planning can free up your time for what matters most—creating meaningful moments people actually remember—let’s talk.


Ready to Dive Deeper?

Join our next webinar: Check out our upcoming webinars.

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