European venue sourcing has unique considerations: VAT treatment varies by country, accessibility standards differ, local labour laws affect setup timing, and payment terms are less standardised than in the US. This checklist covers the full process from requirements definition through contract signing, with Europe-specific notes at each stage.
Step 1: Define Your Requirements Before Sourcing
Before contacting a single hotel, document: event dates and flexibility, attendee count and room block, meeting space needs (plenary + breakouts), F&B requirements, AV and production needs, budget ceiling, and decision timeline. A 30-minute requirements session with your stakeholder saves days of back-and-forth with hotels.
Step 2: Build a Targeted Shortlist
Select 5-10 hotels based on location, capacity, star rating, and brand fit. In Europe, consider transport links carefully: a hotel near the main train station may be more practical than one near the airport for intra-European events. Check the hotel's meeting space independently on platforms like Cvent or Conference Hotel Group — hotel websites often overstate capacity.
Step 3: Send a Structured RFP
Use a standardised template so proposals are comparable. Include your budget range, evaluation criteria, and response deadline (7-10 business days). In Europe, specify whether your budget is inclusive or exclusive of VAT, as rates in some countries (Spain, Italy) are quoted ex-VAT while others (UK, Germany) typically include it.
Step 4: Evaluate and Shortlist
Score proposals using a weighted matrix. Normalise all costs to the same currency and VAT treatment. Shortlist 2-3 hotels for site visits or detailed discussion. In Europe, factor in transport cost for attendees: a slightly more expensive hotel with direct rail links may be cheaper in total when you include attendee travel.
Step 5: Site Visit and Final Negotiation
Visit your top 2-3 venues. Use the site visit to resolve questions that proposals cannot answer: noise levels, actual room condition, F&B quality, and staff responsiveness. Negotiate final terms with your preferred venue while keeping your second choice informed as backup.
Step 6: Contract Review and Signing
Review the contract against your RFP requirements. Check attrition, cancellation, force majeure, payment terms, and liability clauses. In Europe, contracts may be governed by different national laws — clarify governing law and dispute resolution venue before signing.
How to Weight Each Criterion When Comparing Venues
A sourcing checklist is only useful if the criteria are weighted by importance to your specific event. Location and transport links matter more for events with international delegates than for internal company meetings where most attendees drive or take the train. Meeting room capacity matters more for a conference than for a board retreat where the group is small. Before you start evaluating venues against a checklist, assign a weight to each criterion that reflects your event's priorities.
A practical approach is to divide criteria into three tiers: non-negotiable, important, and nice to have. A venue that fails any non-negotiable criterion is automatically eliminated, regardless of how strong it scores elsewhere. Important criteria drive the final shortlist decision. Nice-to-have criteria serve as tiebreakers when two venues score similarly on the things that matter most. This structure prevents a venue with a beautiful terrace from winning over one with a better meeting room because the terrace scored high across many criteria.
Digital Tools Versus Spreadsheets for Venue Comparison
Most event planners still use spreadsheets to compare venues, and a well-structured spreadsheet works perfectly well for events with three to five shortlisted properties. The limitation appears when you are managing multiple RFPs simultaneously, comparing proposals that arrive in different formats, or coordinating with colleagues who need to review and add input. In those scenarios, a shared digital tool or a structured proposal comparison platform removes the version control problems that cause errors in spreadsheet-based processes.
Whatever tool you use, build the comparison framework before proposals arrive, not after. Defining your evaluation criteria in advance prevents you from unconsciously weighting the criteria to favour a venue you have already decided you prefer. It also makes the internal approval process faster because your stakeholders can see a clear, objective comparison rather than a subjective recommendation without supporting data.