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How to Fill a Room: The SF Developer Event Playbook
SF Event Strategy

How to Fill a Room: The SF Developer Event Playbook

Elena Marchetti8 min read

Most SF tech events fail to fill the room not because the product is bad, but because the promotional strategy assumes that a Luma page and a LinkedIn post is a plan. Here's the actual playbook — developer communities, co-promotion deals, and timing windows — that consistently puts 200+ qualified people in the seats.

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5 Venues in SF That Actually Work for Tech Events Under 200 People

sf-event-strategy6 min read

5 Venues in SF That Actually Work for Tech Events Under 200 People

Forget the hotel ballrooms. The venues that make SF tech events memorable are specific, opinionated, and usually booked three months out if you don't know who to call. These five consistently deliver for developer meetups, product launches, and executive dinners — with real pricing and availability notes.

Why Your EU Startup Needs an SF Event (Not Another US Office)

eu-to-sf9 min read

Why Your EU Startup Needs an SF Event (Not Another US Office)

Opening a US office costs $400K a year and takes 18 months to show ROI. A well-executed SF event costs $30K, takes 6 weeks to produce, and can generate enterprise pipeline, press coverage, and investor introductions in a single evening. Here's the case for sequencing these decisions differently.

The $15K Event That Gets You Further Than a $50K LinkedIn Campaign

eu-to-sf7 min read

The $15K Event That Gets You Further Than a $50K LinkedIn Campaign

LinkedIn impressions don't close enterprise deals. A room of 80 qualified technical buyers, a live product demo, and a founder who can answer hard questions on the spot — that does. This is a breakdown of what a $15K event actually buys you, and why the math beats digital-only US marketing for most EU AI companies.

How We Used AI to Identify 200+ Qualified Attendees for a 150-Person Meetup

ai-events10 min read

How We Used AI to Identify 200+ Qualified Attendees for a 150-Person Meetup

Open registration fills rooms with tire-kickers. We use a combination of enrichment APIs, LinkedIn data, and a custom scoring model to identify and personally invite the 200 people most likely to convert for a client's specific goals — then cap the event at 150. Here's exactly how the process works.

Event ROI for AI Companies: The Metrics That Actually Matter

ai-events8 min read

Event ROI for AI Companies: The Metrics That Actually Matter

Attendance headcount is a vanity metric. The numbers that determine whether an event was worth producing are pipeline generated within 30 days, enterprise conversations initiated, developer NPS delta, and press mentions with inbound links. Here's how we track and report each one — and what good looks like.

Why Monthly Meetup Series Beat One-Time Conferences for Developer Adoption

community-building9 min read

Why Monthly Meetup Series Beat One-Time Conferences for Developer Adoption

A single conference creates a spike. A monthly meetup series builds a community. After running eight-event series for multiple AI companies, the data is consistent: recurring formats produce 3-4x the pipeline per dollar spent and compound in value every month. Here's why — and how to design one that doesn't collapse after event three.

Inside the Aleph Alpha SF Launch: Running a Full Event Without Your Client Being There

case-study11 min read

Inside the Aleph Alpha SF Launch: Running a Full Event Without Your Client Being There

Aleph Alpha's leadership couldn't travel to San Francisco. Their product needed to launch anyway. We staffed the event as their SF team — opening presentations, demo stations, press handling, guest list management — while their CEO joined live via video for the keynote. Here's exactly how we pulled it off and what it cost.

The State of Tech Events in San Francisco: What's Working in 2025

industry-news7 min read

The State of Tech Events in San Francisco: What's Working in 2025

The post-pandemic rebound is over — SF tech events are now operating in a crowded, selective market where attendees have real options and developers especially will not show up for bad content. Here's what's working, what's dead, and what the most successful events of the past 12 months have in common.

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