Most event budgets don’t fail in one dramatic moment. They fail in small pieces — a change order here, an overtime charge there, a last-minute equipment swap because the room couldn’t support the original plan. By the time the final invoice arrives, the AV line is 20 or 30 percent over, and no one can point to the single decision that caused it.
Almost every one of those overages traces back to choices made months before load-in. Here are six of the most common AV mistakes, and what experienced planners do instead.
- Bringing In the AV Team After the Big Decisions Are Made
Many planners lock in the venue, the agenda, and the room layout before anyone with production experience has seen the plan. That sequence is backwards. Once contracts are signed, every fix becomes a change order.
Full-service production companies like Premier Creative Group review floor plans, rigging points, power access, and load-in routes before a venue contract is final. A 30-minute review at that stage routinely prevents five-figure surprises later. If the AV partner’s first look at the space happens after the deposit clears, the budget is already at risk.
- Designing the Agenda Before Checking the Room
A session plan only works if the room can support it. Four things decide what a space can handle:
- Ceiling height, which limits screen size and rigging
- Column placement, which controls sightlines
- Available power, which caps lighting and video
- Load-in access, which drives labor hours
A keynote designed for a 24-foot ceiling cannot be squeezed into a 14-foot ballroom without cutting content or paying for workarounds. Match the agenda to the room — or pick the room to match the agenda.
- Skipping the Walkthrough and the Pre-Visualization
Floor plans hide problems that a walkthrough exposes in minutes: an air wall that leaks sound, a chandelier blocking the projector throw, a loading dock shared with three other events happening the same day.
For complex shows, ask for 3D pre-visualization. Seeing the stage, screens, and sightlines in a rendering before load-in lets the team fix design problems while they still cost nothing to fix.
- Underestimating Labor
Equipment is the visible part of an AV quote, but labor often runs 30 to 40 percent of the total — and it is where budgets break. Three questions to ask on every quote:
- How many crew hours are included, and at what call times?
- What triggers overtime, and at what rate?
- Does the venue require union labor or in-house riggers?
A compressed load-in window can double crew size overnight. Getting the labor plan in writing early is the cheapest insurance an event budget can buy.
- Treating Breakout Rooms as an Afterthought
The general session gets the attention, but at a convention, breakouts are where small errors multiply. One missing adapter is a minor problem; the same gap repeated across fourteen rooms is an hour of delays and a hallway full of frustrated speakers.
Teams that manage large multi-room programs — such as Premier Creative Group’s convention services — standardize the kit in every room, stage backups on each floor, and assign roaming techs so one failure never stalls the schedule. That structure, not extra gear, is what keeps big programs on time.
- Buying Gear Instead of Outcomes
Handing vendors a spec list — two projectors, four speakers, one console — invites the cheapest possible match to the letter of the list. Describing outcomes instead (“every seat can read the slides, every attendee can hear clearly in the back row”) makes the production partner responsible for the result, not just the delivery. The best quotes come from sharing goals, not shopping lists.
The Bottom Line
AV overages are rarely caused by equipment prices. They are caused by sequencing: decisions made before the right people were in the room. Bring the production team in early, walk the space, budget labor honestly, and design breakouts with the same care as the main stage. The events that finish on budget are the ones that were planned that way from the start.
