RFPs & Vendor Selection

The event AV RFP checklist

Include these details in your request and you'll get comparable, honest bids — instead of a pile of quotes you can't line up side by side.

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By Tom Diamond · 6 min read · Updated July 2026

The reason AV bids are so hard to compare is that planners rarely give vendors the same information — so every quote assumes something different. Fix that, and the right partner becomes obvious. Here's exactly what to include.

You don't need a formal 20-page RFP. You need to hand every vendor the same clear picture of your event so their numbers mean the same thing. Copy the checklist below into your email or brief.

The essentials (every vendor needs these)

The details that separate pros from rental desks

Ask every vendor these three questions and you'll learn more than the price ever tells you: Who is the named lead running my show? · What's your backup plan if something fails mid-event? · Is your quote itemized?
Ready to send us your brief? Request a proposal →

What a good response looks like

A strong AV partner comes back with an itemized proposal (line by line, not a lump sum), a named show-day lead, and a clear answer on redundancy — how they protect against the feed dropping. If a vendor can't tell you who's in charge on show day or what happens if a cable fails, that's your answer.

Copy-paste template

Feel free to lift this: "We're producing [event type] on [date] at [venue], for [headcount] guests. The program includes [keynotes/panels/awards/band/breakouts]. We think we need [screens/mics/lighting/staging/livestream] but want your recommendation. Our budget range is [range]. Please send an itemized proposal, tell us who our named show-day lead would be, and describe your backup plan if something fails."

Tom Diamond · Founder, True AV4,000+ bands mixed and a decade producing live events across the Wasatch Front.

FAQ

Do I need a formal RFP document?

No. A clear email with the essentials above works fine for most events. The goal is that every vendor quotes the same event.

Should I share my budget?

It's optional, but a range helps a good vendor design the right solution instead of guessing — and it filters out anyone who'd just price to your number.

Have an event coming up?

Skip the guesswork — tell us the date and venue and we'll send an itemized proposal, usually the same day.

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