The Question Every Venue Owner Asks
“I know corporate team building is a huge opportunity. But how do I actually get those clients?”
You’ve read the case studies. You’ve seen the numbers. You’re convinced that corporate clients are the key to filling your weekdays and dramatically increasing your revenue.
But now you’re stuck on the practical question: “How do I find them? How do I approach them? What do I say? What do I charge?”
This guide answers all of those questions — with templates, scripts, and step-by-step instructions.
By the end of this article, you’ll have everything you need to start winning corporate contracts this week.
Part 1: Define Your Offering (Before You Talk to Anyone)
Before you reach out to a single company, you need to define exactly what you’re selling. Corporate clients don’t want vague offers. They want clarity.
Step 1: Create 3 Corporate Packages
| Package | Group Size | Price | Duration | Inclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Silver | 8-14 pax | $595 | 1.5 hours | 2 games + dedicated host + private room + digital scorecard |
| Gold | 15-25 pax | $1,095 | 2 hours | 3 games + 2 hosts + private room + refreshments + performance report + trophy |
| Platinum | 26-40 pax | $1,895 | 2.5 hours | Full venue + 3 hosts + catering + photo package + tournament + annual leaderboard + VIP debrief |
Why packages matter:
- They make it easy for HR managers to choose
- They set clear expectations
- They prevent scope creep (no “can you just add one more game” for free)
- They create a natural upselling path
Step 2: Create a 1-Page “Corporate Menu”
This should be a single page (PDF) with:
- Your venue name + logo
- 3 package options (as above)
- 3-4 bullet points on why your venue is perfect for team building
- 1-2 testimonials from previous corporate clients
- Your contact information and booking link
- A professional photo of your venue
Keep it clean, professional, and easy to read. HR managers don’t have time to decipher complicated proposals.
Step 3: Define Your “Corporate-Only” Weekday Slots
This creates exclusivity and urgency.
Your offer:
*”We reserve Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday mornings (10 AM – 1 PM) and afternoons (2 PM – 5 PM) exclusively for corporate bookings. These slots are available to corporate groups only — not walk-ins or retail customers.”*
Why this works:
- It signals that you take corporate clients seriously
- It makes the booking feel exclusive
- It creates a sense of urgency (“our limited weekday slots fill up quickly”)
- It keeps your weekend and evening retail business untouched
Part 2: Find the Right People to Contact
You’re not reaching out to the CEO. You’re not reaching out to the receptionist. You need to find the actual decision-maker.
Who to Contact (Priority Order)
| Priority | Title | Why |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | HR Manager / People Operations Lead | Directly responsible for team building budgets |
| 2nd | Office Manager | Often handles logistics for events |
| 3rd | Executive Assistant | Books on behalf of leadership |
| 4th | Talent Development Manager | Focuses on employee engagement |
| 5th | Culture & Engagement Lead | Growing role at mid-size companies |
Where to Find Them
| Source | Method |
|---|---|
| Search: “HR Manager [City] [Industry]” | |
| Company websites | Look for “About Us” > “Our Team” > HR contact |
| Industry directories | Local business associations, chamber of commerce |
| Employee referrals | Ask your existing retail customers where they work |
| Event platforms | Meetup, Eventbrite — look for HR-focused networking events |
Your Target List: 50 Companies in 30 Days
Don’t overthink this. Start with a list of 50 companies within 15-20 miles of your venue. Use a spreadsheet to track:
| Company | Contact Name | Title | Outreach Date | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acme Corp | Jane Smith | HR Manager | 6/1/24 | Follow-up sent | 45 employees |
| … | … | … | … | … | … |
Goal: Reach out to 50 companies in 30 days. That’s 3-4 per day.
Part 3: Outreach Templates That Actually Work
Generic outreach gets ignored. Here are templates that have been tested and proven to get responses.
Template 1: Initial Cold Email (Best Response Rate)
Subject: Team building in [City] — 4.9/5 rated experience (no fluff, no fitness required)
Body:
Hi [First Name],
I’m reaching out because I know HR teams are always looking for fresh team building experiences — and I’ve noticed [Company Name] has offices nearby.
I run [Venue Name], an active game venue that specializes in corporate team building events.
Our games are designed to build collaboration, communication, and trust — while being genuinely fun. We’ve hosted groups from [Company A], [Company B], and [Company C], with 4.9/5 satisfaction scores.
We offer a free 30-minute preview session for HR decision-makers and a few colleagues to experience the venue firsthand. No commitment, no sales pressure — just a chance to see if it’s a fit.
[Link to 1-page corporate menu]
Would a quick 10-minute call be of interest to discuss your team building needs for this year?
Best,
[Your Name]
[Title]
[Phone Number]
[Venue Name]
Template 2: LinkedIn Message (Short & Direct)
Subject: Team building experience (4.9/5 rated)
Body:
Hi [First Name],
I noticed you’re the HR lead at [Company Name] — and I have a quick question:
Are you currently exploring team building options for your teams?
I run [Venue Name], an active game venue that specializes in corporate events — with 4.9/5 satisfaction scores.
We offer a complimentary preview session for HR teams to see if it fits your needs.
Would that be of interest?
Template 3: Follow-Up (If They Don’t Respond)
Subject: Quick check-in
Body:
Hi [First Name],
Just following up on my previous email about team building at [Venue Name].
I know you’re likely busy — but I wanted to share that we still have a few weekday slots available this quarter (exclusively reserved for corporate groups).
Our packages start at $595 for groups of 8-14.
If the timing isn’t right for this quarter, no problem — I’m happy to connect later. Just let me know.
Best,
[Your Name]
Pro Tip: Follow up 3-5 times maximum. If they don’t respond after 5 touches, they’re not interested right now. Keep them on a quarterly newsletter list and try again next year.
Template 4: The “Preview Session” Invitation
Subject: Free team building preview — [Company Name]
Body:
Hi [First Name],
Thanks for your interest in [Venue Name]!
I’d love to invite you and 2-3 colleagues for a free 30-minute preview session at our venue.
During the preview, you’ll:
- Experience 2 of our most popular active games
- See how our games build collaboration and communication
- Get a tour of our corporate-friendly facilities
- Receive a sample performance report (so you can see the data we provide)
No pressure. No sales pitch. Just a chance to experience what we offer.
We have preview slots available:
- Tuesday, [Date] at 10 AM
- Wednesday, [Date] at 2 PM
- Thursday, [Date] at 11 AM
Which time works best for you?
Best,
[Your Name]
Part 4: The Booking Funnel — From First Contact to Signed Contract
Stage 1: Initial Contact (Day 1)
- Send outreach email or LinkedIn message
- Track response rate
- Target: 20% response rate (10 out of 50 contacts)
Stage 2: Discovery Call (Day 3-7)
- 10-minute call to understand their needs
- Ask: “What kind of team building have you done before? What worked? What didn’t?”
- Listen more than you talk.
- Identify their specific pain points.
- Recommend the appropriate package based on their group size and objectives.
Stage 3: Preview Session (Day 7-14)
- Invite decision-maker + 2-3 colleagues
- Deliver a flawless preview experience
- Share sample performance reports
- Show them you’re a professional operation
- Ask: “If this works for your team, what would your next step be?”
Stage 4: Booking Confirmation (Day 14-21)
- Send a booking proposal (can be as simple as an email with details)
- Include:
- Package selected
- Date/time confirmed
- Group size
- Total price + payment terms
- What’s included
- What they need to bring (just themselves)
- Get signed confirmation or deposit
Stage 5: Pre-Event Communication (1 week before)
- Send a reminder email with:
- Arrival instructions (parking, entrance)
- Safety briefing (wear comfortable clothes, closed-toe shoes)
- Group size confirmation
- Food/drink options (if included)
- Contact person on the day
Part 5: Pricing Strategy — Charge What You’re Worth
Corporate vs. Retail Pricing Guide
| Pricing Dimension | Retail | Corporate |
|---|---|---|
| Per-person rate | $25-$35 | $40-$70 |
| Booking value | $100-$300 | $600-$2,000 |
| Discounts | Often offered | Almost never — they pay premium for quality |
| Lead time | Same day | 2-8 weeks |
How to Justify Your Corporate Pricing
Your value proposition:
- Private space — They’re not sharing with other groups
- Dedicated host — Facilitation ensures a better experience
- Measurable outcomes — They get data and reports
- Seamless experience — We handle everything, they just show up
- Premium offering — This is their team building investment, not a casual outing
Part 6: The Post-Event Retention Strategy
The real money isn’t in the first booking. It’s in the repeats.
Retention Timeline (After the Event)
| Timing | Action |
|---|---|
| Within 2 hours | Send photos + scores + a thank-you email |
| Within 48 hours | Send the full performance report + satisfaction survey |
| 30 days | Send a “check-in” email: “How was the team dynamic after the event?” |
| 3 months | Share new game releases available for their next booking |
| 6 months | Anniversary offer: “Book your next event and get a bonus game free” |
| 9 months | Reach out: “Let’s plan your end-of-year celebration” |
| 12 months | Renewal conversation: “Ready for your next session?” |
Part 7: The Equipment Advantage
At this point, you might be wondering: “Is my current equipment enough to attract corporate clients?”
What Corporate Clients Expect from Your Equipment
| Expectation | Why It Matters | Our Equipment Advantage |
|---|---|---|
| Reliability | A failed event = lost corporate client forever | Single-point fault isolation = no full system downtime |
| Freshness | They’ll book repeatedly if there’s always something new | Lifelong free system upgrades = new content every 2-3 months |
| Variety | Different groups need different experiences | 300+ game variations = something for every group |
| Data | They want measurable outcomes | Detailed performance reporting available |
| Professionalism | Equipment that looks and feels premium | Premium materials, professional finish |
Part 8: Your 30-Day Action Plan
Week 1: Preparation
- Create 3 corporate packages with pricing
- Design 1-page corporate menu PDF
- Identify 50 target companies within 15-mile radius
- Gather contact details for HR/Office managers
- Set up tracking spreadsheet
Week 2: Outreach
- Send 20 initial outreach emails
- Send 20 LinkedIn messages
- Track responses in spreadsheet
- Schedule 5 discovery calls
Week 3: Follow-Up & Preview
- Follow up with non-responders
- Conduct discovery calls
- Schedule 3-5 preview sessions
- Prepare preview session process
Week 4: Conversion
- Deliver preview sessions
- Send booking proposals
- Secure 2-5 corporate bookings
- Start the retention process
After 30 days, you should have:
- 10-15 conversations with decision-makers
- 3-5 preview sessions completed
- 2-5 confirmed corporate bookings
- $2,000-$10,000 in new corporate revenue
The Bottom Line
Corporate team building isn’t a mystery.
It’s a system.
- Define your offer → Find the right people → Reach out effectively → Convert through previews → Build long-term relationships.
Each step is straightforward. Each step is learnable. Each step is doable.
And the revenue waiting for you at the end of the process is life-changing for your venue.
Next Steps
📧 Email: lily1019099068@gmail.com
🌐 Website: http://iactivate.top/
Activate Games Factory — The Equipment That Helps You Win Corporate Clients.