Why this matters for event venues
For event venue owners and sales managers, the operational problem is usually specific: inquiries arrive with incomplete details and tours are not booked while interest is still high.
Use AI to summarize the inquiry, draft a warm response, and offer the next available tour times for review. The right first project is not a broad AI initiative. It is one workflow with clear inputs, a review point, and a business outcome the team can measure.
The workflow to fix first
Map the current handoff before choosing software. Where does the request arrive, who sees it first, which details are missing, and what should happen next?
That map gives the automation a narrow job and gives staff a simple way to check whether the work is safe, accurate, and useful.
- List the forms, calls, emails, messages, or spreadsheets where the work starts.
- Name the employee who owns the next step today.
- Write the status that should change when the work is handled.
- Define what a human must approve before a customer sees anything.
Tools that fit this use case: Zapier, ChatGPT, Calendly, HoneyBook, Google Sheets
A practical first version can combine tools such as Zapier, ChatGPT, Calendly, HoneyBook, Google Sheets. The point is not to use every tool. The point is to connect the few systems that already touch the workflow.
For example, Zapier can move data between forms, calendars, CRMs, spreadsheets, and messaging tools. ChatGPT can summarize requests or draft a response for review. Vertical systems such as CRMs, booking platforms, practice tools, or shop-management software should remain the system of record when they already hold the business data.
Where creative AI can help
When the workflow includes marketing, creative tools should have a defined role. ChatGPT image generation can produce campaign concepts, service visuals, menu-special images, or ad variants for review. Higgsfield can help create short marketing video concepts and ad-style clips when the business already has a clear offer and brand direction.
The approval step matters. A manager should review claims, prices, compliance-sensitive language, and whether the image or video accurately represents the business before anything is published.
A safe first automation
Start with a workflow that drafts, summarizes, routes, or reminds. Avoid letting automation make final promises, quote prices, give regulated advice, or publish customer-facing content without review.
The first version should save staff time while keeping the business in control. Once the team trusts the workflow, the next step can add more integrations or assign a recurring AI employee to watch the process every day.
How to measure whether it is working
The first week should answer a simple question: did this reduce delay, reduce rework, or help the team follow up faster?
If the answer is not clear, the workflow is probably too broad. Tighten the job before adding more automation.
- Measure response time before and after the change.
- Count how many items needed manual cleanup.
- Track how many follow-ups happened on time.
- Ask the person doing the work whether the new loop saved effort or added noise.
Need a second set of eyes?
Call Annie at (650) 772-6393 or send us a note. She runs the intake conversation, Kevin reviews it, and we email back options that fit the business.