Event marketing pays off, and most of the effective tactics don't require a significant budget. Fifty-two percent of marketers say event marketing drives better returns than any other marketing channel — yet many small business owners skip local events because they assume promotion is too expensive. For businesses across Webster, Dudley, and Oxford, that assumption is worth reconsidering. The tools available to you are largely free; what matters is putting them to work.
Use Free Social Media — and Start Two Weeks Out
Your existing social channels are your most immediate, zero-cost promotional tools. Social media is now the primary way people discover events: 64% of Gen Z and 61% of Millennials use social to find events, making a consistent organic presence a direct line to the most active event-going demographics.
Post a save-the-date as soon as the event is confirmed. Create a Facebook Event, share it to Instagram Stories, and return regularly with countdowns, speaker spotlights, or behind-the-scenes previews. Organic reach — unpaid visibility driven by followers engaging with and sharing your posts — costs nothing and builds as your audience re-shares.
The SBA recommends that local businesses build event reach for free by encouraging existing customers to follow and share, noting that organic social alone can replace a paid ad buy for community-level events.
Send Targeted Emails to Your Existing List
Email is your highest-return promotion channel — and you already have it. Email marketing averages an ROI of 3,600%–3,800% in the US, making it the top-ROI promotion channel for budget-constrained small businesses. That's not a comparison to other budget options; it outperforms most paid channels.
A three-email sequence covers the essentials: save-the-date two weeks out, event details one week before, and a quick reminder the day prior. Keep each message short. What's happening, why it matters, and how to RSVP — that's it.
Bottom line: Your list already exists. Using it for event promotion costs nothing but an hour of your time.
Partner with Other Businesses to Cross-Promote
Cross-promotion — partnering with a non-competing business to reach each other's audiences — is one of the most underused free tactics in local event marketing. A shared social post, a newsletter mention, or a joint listing on both websites can meaningfully extend your reach at zero cost.
For businesses across the Webster-Dudley-Oxford region, this is especially practical. The chamber's membership spans three communities and the broader Worcester County and tri-state area — that's a built-in network of potential partners. A restaurant and a boutique, a fitness studio and a wellness brand: co-marketing with complementary businesses expands reach without any ad spend and can double your promotional footprint overnight.
Create Visual Content That Travels
Strong visuals outperform text posts on every social platform. A short teaser video, an event-themed graphic, or a simple announcement card can carry the weight of your social promotion — none of which requires a designer or a production budget.
When creating graphics for social channels, your website, or printed flyers, visual consistency makes your event look professional and recognizable. Using an AI text-to-image tool like Adobe Firefly lets you generate polished images from a text description, making it straightforward to produce consistent event visuals for both online and print channels. Creating content around the event itself — a blog post about the topic, a video preview of what attendees can expect — also gives you shareable material that extends your reach beyond your immediate followers.
List Your Event on Free Calendars and Directories
A few minutes of setup on free listing platforms can reach people entirely outside your existing network:
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Facebook Events — locally searchable, shareable across networks
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Eventbrite — free basic listings with built-in RSVP tracking
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Google Business Profile — events and posts surface in local search results
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Local community calendars — town websites, regional Facebook groups, local newspapers
The WDO Chamber's area events calendar is another zero-cost option for members. The chamber's audience spans Worcester County and the MA-CT-RI tri-state area — a meaningful reach for any business promoting a local event.
Run a Short Giveaway to Build Pre-Event Buzz
Giveaways drive shares and email sign-ups at the same time. Set up a five-to-seven-day contest two weeks before your event: offer a free ticket, a product bundle, or a modest gift card as the prize, and require entry actions that do promotional work — follow your page, tag a friend, or subscribe to your email list.
The prize doesn't need to be large. A $25 gift card or a free service session is enough to generate meaningful engagement on most local social accounts.
Show Up Before Your Event Does
Don't wait for the event to find your audience — meet them where they already are. Attend chamber meetings, community events, and local business gatherings in the weeks beforehand and mention your event directly. In a connected community like Webster-Dudley-Oxford, in-person word of mouth still carries weight that no social post can fully replicate.
Bring a simple one-page flyer. Ask the organizer if you can make a brief announcement. These in-person moments are free and reach exactly the audience most likely to show up for a local business event.
Make the Most of Your Chamber Membership
For WDO Chamber members, the tools are already in place — the events calendar, the MarketSpace, and the member directory are free promotional resources that are easy to overlook until you need them. Add your event to the calendar. Cross-list in the MarketSpace. Mention it in your member spotlight if the timing lines up.
Combine those resources with a two-week push across social, email, content, and in-person outreach, and you have a promotion plan built entirely on tools you already have access to. No ad budget required.
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This Hot Deal is promoted by Webster Dudley Oxford Chamber of Commerce Inc.
