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The event manager is the person who plans and executes the event, taking responsibility for the creative, technical, and logistical elements. This includes overall event design, brand building, marketing and communication strategy, audio-visual production, script writing, logistics, budgeting, negotiation, and client service.
Event-driven architecture (EDA) is a software architecture paradigm concerning the production and detection of events.Event-driven architectures are evolutionary in nature and provide a high degree of fault tolerance, performance, and scalability.
Event (UML), in Unified Modeling Language, a notable occurrence at a particular point in time; Event (particle physics), refers to the results just after a fundamental interaction took place between subatomic particles; Event horizon, a boundary in spacetime, typically surrounding a black hole, beyond which events cannot affect an exterior observer
Sustainable event management (also known as event greening) is event management with particular concern for environmental, economic and social issues. Sustainability in event management incorporates socially and environmentally responsible decision making into the planning, organisation and implementation of, and participation in, an event.
The overlay design also has a significant role in helping to define the overall environment of a major event. By taking a design-inclusive approach and considering the cultural and design aspects alongside the commercial and functional requirements, memorable places and spaces can be created out of simple components and hired commodities.
A planner at a Chilean wedding event. A wedding planner is a event planner who assists with the design, planning, and management of a client's wedding.Other names include wedding consultant, wedding designer, wedding coordinator, and wedding director.
Event propagation models, such as bubbling, capturing, and pub/sub, define how events are distributed and handled within a system. Other key aspects include event loops, event queueing and prioritization, event sourcing, and complex event processing patterns. These mechanisms contribute to the flexibility and scalability of event-driven systems.
An event study is a statistical method to assess the impact of an event (also referred to as a "treatment"). [1] Early prominent uses of event studies occurred in the field of finance. [1] For example, the announcement of a merger between two business entities can be analyzed to see whether investors believe the merger will create or destroy value.