Behind the Scenes of Running A Major Conference... What Most People Don’t Realize
When people walk into the Midwest Digital Marketing
Conference (MDMC), they see polished stages, energized speakers, packed
sessions, networking, branding, technology, smiling volunteers, coffee
stations, food trucks, and a seamless attendee experience.
What they often do not see is what happens behind the
curtain.
Running a large conference is not simply “putting on an
event.” It is the management of a high-stakes business operation with a fixed
deadline, hundreds of moving parts, and no option to postpone when pressure
rises. Industry research consistently notes that event planners face major
stress around budgeting, staffing, logistics, rising costs, and stakeholder
expectations. PCMA identified budget concerns as one of the top challenges
facing event organizers, along with staffing shortages and workload pressure.
And that is exactly where the real story lives.
The Clock Never Stops
Unlike many business projects, conferences do not have
flexible launch dates. Once the doors open, they open. Once thousands of
dollars are committed, they are committed. Once guests arrive, excuses have no
value.
The Project Management Institute has noted that events
create a unique form of pressure because deadlines are immovable and schedule
overruns are not acceptable.
That means every delay matters.
- A missing sponsor payment matters.
- A late speaker deck matters.
- A catering miscount matters.
- A registration tech glitch matters.
- An AV issue matters.
- A weather issue matters.
- A vendor misunderstanding matters.
And all of it tends to matter at the same time.
The Weight of the Wallet
There is another reality many people never fully understand:
At the end of the day, someone has to own the financial
bottom line.
- Someone must look at contracts.
- Someone must ask if costs are justified.
- Someone must monitor ticket sales daily.
- Someone must decide what can be upgraded and what cannot.
- Someone must determine whether the event breaks even, loses money, or succeeds financially.
That responsibility can be lonely.
While others may focus only on programming, branding,
hospitality, or creative ideas, the person carrying the financial burden must
balance optimism with discipline. Hyatt notes that strong event budgeting is
essential because it protects investment, reduces risk, and builds stakeholder
confidence.
What many people don’t realize is how quickly small decisions turn into real dollars.
A simple request—like adding a second microphone to a breakout room—can cost $150–$200, even if it’s used for just one hour. A last-minute tweak to catering or AV may seem minor in isolation, but multiplied across dozens of rooms, sessions, and attendees, those changes can materially impact the bottom line.
Even food comes with constraints. Due to health regulations, anything not consumed within a short window—often just a couple of hours—must be removed and discarded. That means over-ordering isn’t just wasteful; it’s expensive.
These are the kinds of decisions happening constantly behind the scenes. Individually, they seem small. Collectively, they determine whether an event stays on budget, breaks even, or falls short.
In plain English: if the money side is not managed, nothing
else matters.
Pressure Changes People
Pressure can also strain relationships.
When stakes are high, patience can shrink. Tone can harden.
Emails can feel sharper than intended. Small misunderstandings can become
larger than they should. Good people can say things they normally would not
say.
This does not always come from bad intent.
Often, it comes from fatigue, urgency, fear, and the
emotional weight of carrying too much for too long. Industry sources discussing
event-planning burnout frequently point to the nonstop juggling of
responsibilities and expectations as a major cause of tension.
That does not excuse poor behavior—but it does explain why
grace matters.
What Leadership Really Looks Like
Leadership during conference season is not glamorous.
- It can mean making unpopular calls.
- It can mean saying no when others want yes.
- It can mean absorbing criticism quietly.
- It can mean keeping calm while others panic.
- It can mean protecting the mission while navigating personalities.
And sometimes it means repairing relationships after the
dust settles.
Because once the ballroom empties and the lights dim, what
remains are the people who built it together.
Why It Is Still Worth It
Despite the pressure, there is something meaningful about
creating an event that helps others learn, grow, connect, and advance their
careers.
That makes the stress worth carrying.
MDMC is more than sessions and speakers. It is opportunity.
It is community. It is students meeting professionals. It is ideas becoming
action. It is momentum for people who needed it.
So if you ever attend a conference and everything seems
effortless, remember:
It probably wasn’t.
Someone carried a heavy load so others could have a great
experience.
And more often than not, that burden falls on the one
watching the numbers, signing the checks, and making sure the whole thing
survives.
Sources & Further Reading
The realities described above are well documented across the events industry:
PCMA — Budget Woes Top List of Event Planners’ Biggest Challenges
https://www.pcma.org/budget-woes-top-list-event-planners-biggest-challenges/
(Highlights budget constraints, rising costs, staffing shortages, workload pressure, and stakeholder challenges in event planning.)
PCMA — Budget Pressures and Big Expectations: Insights from the Meetings Market Survey
https://www.pcma.org/budget-pressures-big-expectations-insights-pcma-meetings-market-survey/
(Explains how planners must manage strict deadlines, budgets, rising expectations, and complex operations simultaneously.)
PCMA — Event Planning: The Third-Most Stressful Job in the World
https://www.pcma.org/3rd-most-stressful-job-event-planning/
(Discusses rising costs, financial pressure, and the growing stress placed on those responsible for event outcomes and revenue.)
PCMA — Planners Under Pressure
https://www.pcma.org/industry-under-pressure-stress/
(Explores how stress is deeply embedded in event planning roles and impacts professionals across the industry.)
GoGather — Event Planning: Overcoming the Top 10 Challenges
https://gogather.com/blog/top-10-event-planning-challenges
(Details the complexity of managing budgets, logistics, vendors, travel, and attendee expectations across large-scale events.)
TEAM IM — 7 Key Challenges in Event Planning
https://teami.org/7-key-challenges-in-event-planning-and-how-to-overcome-them/
(Outlines core operational challenges including budgeting, coordination, and managing multiple stakeholders.)
Fundraising Coach — Event Planning Challenges and Solutions
https://fundraisingcoach.com/2025/01/17/event-planning-challenges-and-solutions/
(Discusses financial constraints and the difficulty of delivering high-quality experiences within limited budgets.)
Wikipedia — Event Management Overview
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_management
(Provides a broad overview of the complexity of event management, including budgeting, logistics, coordination, and execution.)
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