Write For Us

Is there something you want to share with the events industry? Do you have expertise that other event profs can learn from? Do you have an opinion you want heard?

If that sounds like you, then you could be suitable as a guest writer for Event Industry Blog. As you might expect, we do have rules on the sort of thing we’re after (and what we’re not) so before you make a submission or pitch an idea, please read the guidelines below.

Apply to be a contributor now with the form below!

Event Industry News is the perfect platform for you to get your news out there as well as read about what’s going on in the industry.

If you would like to submit your event industry news, then apply for an account. Anything submitted will be checked for quality and you can check below for the submission guidelines, we will add your content to the site. Try to include images, data, associated links to supplement your article.

Submit your details below, along with a brief summary of your connection and interest in the events industry and we’ll get back to you as quick as we can.

    If you have an article you'd like to send through right away, use the file uploader below (optional)

    Submission guidelines

    The guidelines below apply to guest blogs and submissions only. 

    Is there something you want to share with the events industry? Do you have expertise that other event profs can learn from? Do you have an opinion you want heard?

    If that sounds like you, then you could be suitable as a guest writer for Event Industry Blog. As you might expect, we do have rules on the sort of thing we’re after (and what we’re not) so before you make a submission or pitch an idea, please read the guidelines below.

    Your work must be 100% original and unpublished

    Please don’t submit articles you have published on your own blog or elsewhere. We check each piece of work to ensure it hasn’t been published or plagiarised so if we find yours has, it won’t be accepted.

    Submissions must be a minimum of 600 words

    The readers of EIB prefer longer more informative content so we have a minimum word count of 600 words, but we prefer articles over 1000 words.

    You can publish your work on your own blog once it’s been published on EIB

    If you do this it has to be 30 days after publication on EIB, marked as originally published on EIB and linked back to the original. You also must use the source meta tag to indicate it is syndicated content.

    <meta name=”syndication-source” content=”https://eventindustryblog.co.uk/your-article-url>`

    You must be involved in events

    You must be an event professional, a supplier to the event industry or a representative of somebody that is. We also welcome submissions from non-professionals that have organised events and students of event and event related subjects (such as audio visual).

    Your content must be interesting and insightful

    We don’t want to publish the same topics over and over so please check EIB for similar blog before submitting. If you see we’ve already covered the topic, consider expanding on the topic to contribute something that covers a different angle.

    Please cite sources and references

    If you make a claim or reference some information or statistic, please back it up by linking to the source. If you are the source, please provide your own data to back up what you are suggesting.

    Your content should be grammatically correct and free of errors

    We hope you’d do this anyway, but please carry out a grammar and spell check of your work before you send it over to us.

    Your content should be readable

    Your content should read fluently and have a good readability score. If you have something to share but aren’t the best writer, we don’t want that to put you off! Ask a colleague to sub-edit your work or use a tool such as Grammarly or Readable to help you.

    Use the same grammatical person throughout

    Please follow one of the styles below and keep the same style throughout your entire work:

    • Refer to yourself in the first person as the writer
    • Write the entire article in third person