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The Event Advocacy Playbook · Series

The Budget Formula: How Many Attendees Will My Spend Actually Buy?

Plug-in math to forecast how many attendees your spend will actually buy - before you commit a single dollar.

8 min read

Most budget planning starts with a number someone made up. Flip it: pick the room you want full, and let the math hand you the budget. Every formula below is plug-in - drop in your own numbers as you go.

Step 1 - From attendees to registrations

You can't buy seats. You buy registrations, and a chunk of registrants never show. So the first move is working backwards from the room you want to fill, using a realistic show rate.

Registrations needed = Attendee target ÷ (Reg → Attend rate)
  • In-person, paid ticket: 50-70% (sunk cost lifts attendance).
  • Webinar / virtual: 30-45% - Goldcast's independent 2026 benchmark (6.8M registrations) puts the live show rate near 32%; plan conservatively.
  • Lever: multi-touch SMS + personalized email reminders measurably cut no-shows - a well-established mechanism (the same one behind appointment-reminder texts), so layer them onto every run-up.

Step 2 - What each channel buys

Now you know the registration number you have to hit. The next question is what it costs to buy each one - and that depends entirely on the channel.

CAC(channel) = Cost per click ÷ (LP conv. rate × Reg→Attend rate)
Registrations from channel = Channel spend ÷ CAC(channel)

If you have history, skip the components and use your actual cost per registered for that channel. And mind the units: the public benchmarks in the channel map (LinkedIn CPL ~$408, Sopro 2025) are cost per lead - a completed registration costs more once landing-page conversion is applied. Rule of thumb - and these are planning figures from events run on Premagic, not audited benchmarks: warm audiences (retargeting your own list) land registrations around $40-50; cold paid social runs ~$200 per registration. If you have last event's numbers, they beat any rule of thumb.

Step 3 - The advocacy multiplier

Paid and organic channels each carry a CAC. Advocacy is the channel that bends the math, because it adds registrations on top of that base instead of charging per head. To model it, decide what share of registrations advocacy will drive (target: 30%).

Advocacy lift = Base regs × [ advocacy share ÷ (1 - advocacy share) ]

At 30% share that multiplier is 0.30 ÷ 0.70 = 0.429 - advocacy adds ~43% on top of your paid + organic base, at near-zero marginal cost.

This models advocacy top-down, as a lift on your base. The registration forecaster on the advocacy engine builds the same number bottom-up from share rates and visits per share. Use this page to set spend and that one to stress-test the mechanics - expect similar, not identical, numbers.

Step 4 - Blended cost

Those extra advocacy registrations don't just pad the top line - they change what your whole program costs per head. Roll every channel together and you get the number your CFO actually cares about.

Blended CAC / reg = Total spend ÷ total registrations

Because advocacy is mostly a flat cost (platform + incentives + a person's time), every advocacy registration drags your blended CAC down.

Try it: forecast your event

Here's the worked 1,000-attendee B2B event: attendee target 1,000, show rate 55%, advocacy share 30% - it lands ~1,818 registrations for a blended cost near $22 per registration. All four steps - show rate, channel CAC, the advocacy multiplier, and blended cost - live below. Edit any cell to model your own.

Budget & attendee calculator
Set your target, then enter spend and cost-per-registration for each channel. Advocacy adds a lift on top of the paid + organic base. Edit any cell - everything recalculates live. Preloaded with the 1,000-attendee example below.
ChannelSpend ($)CAC ($/reg)Regs
Email (house list)318
Organic social127
Paid social (retargeting + lookalikes)382
Paid search127
Newsletter sponsorships127
Partners / community191
Paid + organic base$31,818-1,272
Advocacy engineflat cost: platform + incentives + timeflat545
Total$39,818-1,817
1,817
Total registrations
999
Projected attendees
100% of your 1,000 target
$39,818
Total spend
$21.91
Blended CAC / registration
$39.86
Blended CAC / attendee
$13,633
Ad spend advocacy replaces
30% of regs, near-zero marginal cost
Regs per channel = spend ÷ CAC. Advocacy regs = base regs × [ share ÷ (1 - share) ]; at 30% share that is a ~43% lift on the base. Projected attendees = total registrations × show rate. CAC figures are illustrative - overwrite them with your own historical cost-per-registered before committing budget.
Buying those 545 advocacy registrations through warm paid social instead ($45/reg) would cost ~$24,500 - three times the $8,000 flat advocacy budget. At cold paid-social rates (~$200/reg) it's $109,000. And the paid versions convert worse, because a registration a participant brings in carries trust that ads can't buy. Advocacy is cheaper and higher-converting.

The ROI case: the four numbers your CFO wants

Forecasting is half the job; the other half is proving it worked after the event - the part most event teams struggle with. Advocacy's edge over "buzz" is that it is measurable: every share and every registration ties back to a named participant. Four numbers turn that into a report a CFO signs off on (figures below reuse the worked example - swap in your own):

  1. Ad spend avoided. The 545 advocacy registrations would have cost ~$24,500 (warm) to ~$109,000 (cold) on paid social. Against the $8,000 flat program cost, that is ~$16,500-$101,000 the event did not have to spend to hit the same number.
  2. Blended CAC, before vs after. Advocacy drags the whole event's cost-per-registration down toward ~$22. Report that delta against your paid-only blended CAC - it is the line a CFO tracks quarter over quarter.
  3. Earned media value. Every share is impressions you would otherwise buy. The EMV calculator converts total reach into the ad rate it replaces.
  4. Attributed registrations. Per-advocate attribution means you can name which registrations advocacy drove - not a modeled guess. That is the number that answers "how do you know it worked?"

The registration forecaster turns your own inputs into the first two numbers before the event; per-advocate attribution fills in the actual figures after it.

CAC figures here are illustrative planning placeholders - always overwrite with your own historical cost-per-registered before committing budget. Want to see the earned-media value of all that sharing? Try the EMV calculator.

The formula tells you advocacy should drive ~30% of registrations at near-zero marginal cost. Next comes the part that actually earns it - The Advocacy Engine walks through the system that turns speakers, attendees, and sponsors into the sharing this model assumes.

See it on your event

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