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Event Timelines and Run‑Of‑Show: How I Build Them

Posted by Elise

Timelines and run-of-show documents are where so much stress either dissolves or multiplies. My goal is always the same: create a plan detailed enough that everyone knows what’s happening, but flexible enough to handle reality.

The Long-Range Planning Timeline

For major fundraising events, I like to start 12-14 months out and work backward.

Key milestones often include:

  • Goal-setting and event concept
  • Venue and date confirmation
  • Sponsorship strategy and outreach window
  • Vendor booking (AV, catering, rentals, entertainment)
  • Ticket pricing and registration launch
  • Auction/raffle planning and procurement (if applicable)
  • Program development (script, speakers, videos, live elements)
  • Marketing and promotion schedule
  • Final confirmations, walkthroughs, and contingency planning

This long-range timeline becomes your project roadmap. It helps you avoid last-minute crunches that were completely predictable.

Zooming In: Pre-Event Week And Day-Of

The week of the event, I want a granular view of:

  • Deliveries and load-in schedules
  • Final counts and guarantees
  • Staff, volunteer, and vendor communications
  • Tech checks, rehearsals, and run-throughs

This is where we catch last gaps and make sure everyone has the same playbook.

The Run‑Of‑Show (ROS): Your Minute‑By‑Minute Script

The ROS is the detailed schedule for the event itself, especially the program. It’s written so that anyone can understand the flow.

It typically includes:

  • Start and end times for each program element
  • Who is on stage when, and what they’re doing
  • Cues for AV (lighting, sound, slides, video, music)
  • Notes about transitions (e.g., when servers should hold off, when doors close, when auction closes)

I like ROS docs that are easy to read at a glance, often in a table format with columns for time, action, who’s responsible, and notes.

Planning For Real People And Real Time

We’re not planning robots; we’re planning humans.

So I build in:

  • Buffer time around key transitions
  • Space for a speaker who might go a couple minutes long
  • Contingency options (if X runs over, we trim Y; if tech fails, we do Z instead)

A strong ROS is less about perfection and more about clarity and flexibility. It gives you control without making you rigid.

Why This Matters So Much

When you have a solid timeline and ROS:

  • Staff and volunteers feel calmer and more confident
  • Vendors know how to support you
  • Speakers feel held instead of lost
  • Donors experience an evening that feels seamless, not chaotic

You can’t control everything, but you can absolutely control how prepared you are—and that preparation shows.

Filed Under: Nonprofit

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