Dealing With Registration In-House
You may decide to handle the bookings and enquiries yourself, or at least keep it in-house. This need not be the daunting task it may appear, so long as a system is put into place to ensure that it is as automated as possible. Decide on your system before the first bookings arrive.
Setting Up Your Own In-House Manual System
All delegates registering to attend the event, whether fee-paying or otherwise, will require a confirmation that their booking has been received and they are expected to attend. The confirmation document can include a number of items such as directions, instructions for when they arrive, reminder of the registration time, etc. Ensure the letter, in keeping with the brochure and any other literature issued, is attractive, unambiguous and follows the house-style if appropriate.
What To Include In The Information Pack
DirectionsThe venue should be able to provide you with a map to issue to all attendees. Make sure that it is up-to-date. It is not uncommon for new roundabouts and traffic systems to be put in place whilst the venue merrily carries on issuing the same map, causing unnecessary grief to the delegates in the process.
There are companies who will provide maps of any given area customised to your own specification. These look very attractive and can incorporate your own logos. (Perhaps yet another sponsorship opportunity?)
Invoice/Receipt
You will have already established whether or not payment is to be made at the time of booking or whether individuals can be invoiced. This is a decision that should be made in conjunction with the organisation’s accounting department or honorary treasurer.
Similarly credit card payments will need to be processed according to the organisation’s normal practice. The registration process can get very complicated if the payments have to be separated and sent to the accounts department for processing, and the protracted process can also increase the room for error and mislaid documents. You will have to discuss the implications of this with appropriate management and find a system that will work for you all.
Confirmation Details
The letter of confirmation should be, as usual, in line with the company/organisation’s corporate image, and should be welcoming and clear. Instructions should be precise and unambiguous. Remind delegates of the registration time and whether coffee will be available to them on arrival. (See
Figure 10.)
Badges
Some organisers dispatch badges with the letter of confirmation to save time and prevent unnecessary queuing during the registration period. If this is the case they should be instructed to bring the badge with them to gain entry and to collect a badge holder (if used) when they register.
Make a note of all correspondence with delegates so that you know exactly what has been dispatched and when. Should any delegates have any queries you will then be able to check the dispatch details immediately. Keeping a file of the completed and processed booking forms, in alphabetical order to be taken on site, will ensure that you will quickly be able to look up any particular delegate’s queries.

Fig. 10. Delegate confirmation letter.
Notification Of Workshop Allocation
If workshop places have been designated, relevant details such as time and location could be included in the letter of confirmation.
A List Of Useful Numbers And Travel Hints
Supply the name and telephone number of a local taxi firm, rail enquiry number, nearest airport, etc. Also indicate the most convenient tube station if the event is in London. By contacting London Transport you may be able to obtain tube maps and other helpful leaflets that you can include in the information pack.
Registering Delegates On-Site
It is important that the registration system which you decide upon is as simple as possible. Before the arrival of computerised registration systems it was usual for badges to be laid out in alphabetical order on the registration desk. This is derided these days by some professional organisers, but although not terribly sophisticated it is a reliable and effective method of registering delegates. The badges are easy to locate as each individual arrives at the desk, and it is easy to see at a glance who is and who is not in attendance.
For security reasons an alternative method is to put the badges in alphabetical order in a long box so that unregistered delegates are unable to ‘assume’ the identity of someone who is pre-registered. If packs, papers, bags, etc are also to be handed out ensure they are laid out in an obvious order. If space allows you could have separate tables so that delegates can register and collect their badge at one table and then move on to a second table to collect their packs, etc. This also
encourages delegates to move away from the main area of registration as quickly as possible.
Keep an area free for dealing with late payments and queries, and ensure that you have all the items to hand that you may need, such as receipts, pens and credit card facilities. Remember to book a phone line if an automated credit card facility is to be used.