If you've ever tried to organise an event in Lagos, you know the city has its own rules. Traffic, generators, last-minute vendor cancellations, IBAN payment issues β Lagos doesn't make it easy. But it also rewards those who plan well with some of the most electric, talked-about events on the continent.
Whether you're planning an intimate networking dinner for 50 people or a full-scale concert for 5,000, this guide covers every critical step β drawn from interviews with over 30 of Lagos's most successful event organisers.
1. Define Your Event Foundation
Before you book a single vendor or send out a single WhatsApp message, you need to be ruthlessly clear on four things:
- Purpose: Is this a networking event, a celebration, a product launch, a concert or a conference? The purpose shapes every decision that follows.
- Target Audience: Who exactly is this for? Age range, income level, interests and location all affect your venue, pricing and marketing strategy.
- Budget: Establish your total budget before anything else. In Lagos, always add a 20% contingency β things almost always cost more than quoted.
- Date & Time: Avoid public holidays, major football fixtures (Super Eagles matches will empty your event), and last-minute Ramadan schedule changes.
Never schedule your event to start before 5pm on a weekday, and always account for at least 45 minutes of "Lagos time" on top of your official start time. Build a buffer programme into your run-of-show.
2. Choose the Right Venue
Venue selection is where most Lagos events either succeed or fail. Here's what to look for:
Location & Accessibility
The most underrated factor. A venue on the mainland might be cheaper, but if 70% of your audience lives on the Island, you'll have empty seats. Study where your attendees are coming from before choosing a side of Lagos.
- Victoria Island & Lekki: Best for corporate events, product launches and upscale gatherings. Higher cost, but your Island crowd won't need to cross bridges.
- Ikeja & Maryland: Most central location in Lagos. Good for events drawing from both Island and Mainland. Great for tech and business events.
- Yaba: Growing creative hub. Perfect for startups, arts events and young professional gatherings.
- Surulere: Strong for sports events, concerts and community gatherings drawing a mainland crowd.
Capacity & Layout
A venue that's too large feels empty and kills energy. Aim for 80β90% capacity. If you're expecting 300 people, book a venue certified for 350, not 500. Use staging, draping and lighting to make smaller spaces feel premium.
Generator & Power
This is non-negotiable in Lagos. Always ask: does the venue have a dedicated generator? What is the kilowatt capacity? Who pays for diesel? Lagos power cuts are frequent and unannounced β have this conversation upfront or include it in your contract.
Many Lagos venues quote a base rate then add separate charges for: security, cleaning, parking management, table and chair setup, generator usage and "corkage" fees on beverages. Always request an all-inclusive quote in writing before signing any contract.
3. Build Your Vendor Team
In Lagos, your vendor relationships are everything. The best vendors are booked months in advance. Here's who you need and when to book them:
- Caterer (book 8β12 weeks out): Get tastings from at least 3 vendors. For Nigerian events, the jollof rice is make-or-break. Don't skip the tasting.
- Photographer & Videographer (book 6β10 weeks out): Review their previous event work carefully. Nigerian events move fast β you need someone who can capture spontaneous moments, not just posed shots.
- MC/Host (book 6β8 weeks out): A great MC can save a slow event. Brief them thoroughly on your agenda, your audience and any running jokes or inside references.
- Sound & Lighting (book 4β6 weeks out): Always do a technical site visit before the event. Sound check the day before, not the day of.
- Security (book 3β4 weeks out): For Lagos events above 200 people, always hire professional security. Agree on crowd control procedures in advance.
- Decorator (book 4β6 weeks out): Share your theme board and colour palette clearly. Visit a previous event they've decorated before booking.
4. Set Your Ticket Pricing Strategy
Pricing is both art and science in Lagos. Price too high and you get a half-empty room. Price too low and you get the wrong crowd β or worse, make a loss.
Tiered Pricing Works Best
Structure your tickets in at least three tiers:
- Early Bird: 20β30% below standard price. Sells your first 30β40% of tickets and creates urgency. Set a hard deadline.
- Standard: Your base rate. This is where you make your money.
- VIP/Premium: 2β3x the standard price. Includes perks like reserved seating, a gift bag, meet-and-greet access or an open bar. Always include something tangible.
The Lagos Price-Sensitivity Rule
For professional/corporate audiences in Lagos (lawyers, bankers, tech workers), β¦15,000ββ¦50,000 tickets sell well when the value is clearly communicated. For student or creative crowds, aim to keep general admission under β¦10,000.
Appnin's event creation dashboard lets you set multiple ticket tiers, automate early bird expiry, add promo codes and see real-time sales data β all in one place. No spreadsheets needed.
5. Master Your Marketing Timeline
The biggest mistake Lagos event organisers make? Starting to market too late. Here's the timeline that consistently works:
- 8 weeks out: Announce the event. Save-the-date post on Instagram and a WhatsApp broadcast to your existing audience. Early bird tickets go live on Appnin.
- 6 weeks out: Speaker/performer/vendor announcements. Behind-the-scenes content. Early bird deadline reminder.
- 4 weeks out: Standard tickets go live. Begin paid promotion if budget allows. Partner with complementary brands for cross-promotion.
- 2 weeks out: Testimonials and anticipation content. "Only X tickets left" urgency posts. Final push on WhatsApp groups relevant to your audience.
- 1 week out: Practical information posts (parking, dress code, what to bring). Confirm all vendor bookings. Send first communication to ticket buyers.
- Day before: Final reminder to all ticket holders. Post your venue address and time clearly. Go to bed early.
6. Manage the Day Itself
The best-planned events still fall apart on the day if you don't have the right systems in place. Here's what separates professionals from first-timers:
Arrive Ridiculously Early
For a 4pm event, your team should be at the venue by 10am. Lagos vendors are notoriously late β if you arrive at 2pm expecting a 2pm setup, you'll be setting up until 5pm.
Have a Written Run-of-Show
A detailed, minute-by-minute schedule shared with every vendor and team member. If it's not written down, it won't happen. Include buffer time between every segment.
Use QR Code Check-In
Physical ticket checking creates long queues and reduces your attendees' first impression of your event. Appnin's QR code check-in system lets your team scan tickets with any smartphone β attendees are checked in within 3 seconds.
Assign One Person Per Crisis
You cannot run the event and also manage the caterer and also handle VIP arrivals. Delegate clearly. One person on vendor management. One on guest relations. One on programme flow. You as the organiser oversee everything and intervene only when needed.
Key Takeaways
- Start planning at least 8β12 weeks before your event date for anything above 100 people
- Always add 20% contingency to your budget β Lagos surprises are guaranteed
- Venue selection is your most important single decision β prioritise location over aesthetics
- Build a tiered ticket pricing structure with early bird, standard and VIP options
- Begin marketing 8 weeks out and post consistently until the day of the event
- Use QR code check-in to eliminate queues and create a professional first impression
- Get everything β venue, vendors, payment terms β in writing