Writing your event description

Updated 10 Jun 2026

The description is your main pitch to potential attendees. A good one answers every question someone might have before they decide to RSVP.


What to include

What is the event? Start with a clear, direct sentence about what is happening. Do not bury the lead.

Who is it for? Tell people if there is a target audience — beginners, professionals in a specific field, fans of a particular thing. This helps the right people self-select in and the wrong fit self-select out.

What will happen? Give a rough agenda or list the main activities, speakers, or topics. People want to know what they are signing up for.

What should they bring or prepare? If anything is required — a laptop, a specific skill level, registration on another platform — say so clearly.

Practical details — anything not covered by the structured fields: parking, dress code, accessibility notes, what is included in the ticket price.


Formatting

The description editor supports markdown formatting:

  • **bold** for emphasis
  • # Heading and ## Subheading for structure
  • - item for bullet lists
  • [link text](url) for links
  • Tables for schedules, speaker line-ups, or pricing tiers

Use formatting to break up long descriptions — a wall of text loses people quickly.


Keep it honest

Do not oversell. An accurate description sets the right expectations and leads to better attendee satisfaction. If the event is casual and small, say so. If it is a serious professional conference, say that instead.


Length

There is no rule, but shorter is usually better. Cover the essentials clearly and stop. If you need a long description, use headings to make it scannable.