ChatGPT Prompts for Event Planners: Run Better Events With Half the Back-Office Work
Event planning is coordination at scale — vendors, timelines, clients, and contingencies all in motion at once. The writing and admin that surrounds every event is where the hours go. These prompts compress that work.
Event proposal
The document that wins or loses the contract:
"I'm writing an event proposal for [client/company name]. Event type: [wedding / corporate conference / gala / product launch / etc.]. Key details: [date, estimated guest count, venue type, client's stated goals, budget range if known]. Write a professional event proposal that includes: an executive summary, proposed event concept, key services and deliverables, rough timeline, and a next steps section. Tone: confident and collaborative, not a boilerplate template."
The executive summary is what gets read. Make it specific to this client.
Vendor briefing
Vendors need information, not assumptions:
"I need to brief a [caterer / AV company / florist / photographer / venue coordinator] for an event. Event details: [date, guest count, venue, event type, key timeline moments]. Write a vendor briefing document that covers: event overview, their specific scope of work, setup and teardown timing, who to report to on site, and 3 things that most commonly go wrong with this vendor type and how I want them handled."
The "most common problems" section is what separates professional briefings from basic ones.
Day-of timeline
The document that runs the event:
"Build a day-of timeline for a [event type] with [X] guests at [venue type]. Key fixed moments: [ceremony time / dinner service / speeches / etc.]. Starting from [start time], create a minute-by-minute production schedule for the first [X] hours that includes: all vendor arrival and setup windows, client/VIP arrival, program flow, and buffer time for common delays. Flag the 3 most likely points where timing slips."
Buffer time built in is the difference between a tight timeline and a realistic one.
Post-event client email
The follow-up that cements the relationship:
"Write a post-event email to a client after [event type]. The event went [well / with some hiccups — describe]. Key wins to mention: [list 2-3]. Any issues and how they were resolved: [describe if applicable]. I want to: thank them, gather feedback, plant the seed for future events or referrals, and make the interaction feel genuine rather than transactional. Under 250 words."
Clients remember how you made them feel after the event almost as much as the event itself.
Vendor negotiation prep
Before any contract conversation:
"I'm negotiating with a [vendor type] for an event. My target price: [$X]. Their quote: [$Y]. My leverage points: [list what you have — multiple events booked, referral potential, off-peak date, flexibility on details]. Write a negotiation script that: leads with genuine interest rather than price objections, makes one concrete counter-offer, and identifies 2-3 non-price concessions I could ask for (upgrades, extended hours, etc.) if they won't reduce the base price."
Price isn't always the lever. Knowing what else you can ask for is underused.
Contingency plan
Every event needs a plan B:
"I'm planning a [event type] for [X guests] at [outdoor / indoor venue]. Write a contingency planning document that covers: weather contingencies for [specific risks], vendor no-show protocols (caterer, AV, photographer), venue emergency procedures, and a communication tree for who gets contacted first if something goes wrong on event day. Make this practical enough to hand off to an assistant."
The contingency plan nobody reads until they need it is better than the one that doesn't exist.
Post-mortem notes
Institutional memory that improves next time:
"Write a post-event debrief template for internal use after a [event type]. Categories to cover: what went well (and why), what broke down (root cause, not just description), vendor ratings, client satisfaction indicators, budget vs actuals summary, and 3 specific changes to make for the next similar event. Make it honest enough to be useful, not just a feel-good summary."
The debrief you do in 30 minutes the week after saves you hours on the next event.
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500+ prompts for event professionals, hospitality, and client service roles: https://toshleonard.gumroad.com/l/rzenot
Less admin. Better events. More repeat clients.
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