Edgbaston Stadium has become the first UK venue to deploy a fully automated proposal system. This move directly targets a critical problem currently facing hospitality teams: the high revenue cost of response delays.
By implementing iVvy’s new “Instant Proposal” tool, the venue is addressing a documented drop-off in sales performance. Data reveals that same-day proposals convert at 26%, whereas next-day responses fall to just 15%. Consequently, this 11-point gap represents a massive loss for venues that rely solely on manual workflows.
The Speed Problem in Event Sales
Most venue or events sales teams currently struggle with a manual bottleneck. Because enquiries arrive via email, web forms, and phone, staff must manually check availability. Furthermore, they have to calculate bespoke pricing and draft complex documents.
As a result, this process often extends into the next business day. By the time the proposal reaches the client, a competitor has often already responded. Therefore, the lead quickly cools.
“Creating proposals is one of the most critical and slowest parts of group sales,” says Felix Undeutsch, CEO of hivr.ai. “Every delay risks lost revenue.”
For a venue processing 100 qualified enquiries monthly at an average value of £5,000, shifting to same-day responses could reclaim approximately £55,000 in monthly revenue.
Closing the Revenue Gap with Event Sales AI Automation
The AI does not simply “generate a document.” Instead, it reads incoming emails and extracts guest counts or specific dates. Following this, it generates a formatted proposal within seconds.
More importantly, it introduces AI-powered lead scoring. Rather than treating all enquiries with equal urgency, the system identifies “warm” and “hot” leads. Thus, the sales team can apply human attention where the conversion probability justifies the effort.
Angela Sanders, Head of Conference and Event Sales at Edgbaston, confirms the shift: “It frees up more time for consultative selling while AI handles initial qualification. Consequently, it is transforming how we work.”
The Competitive Adoption Race
Edgbaston’s “first-in-UK” status creates a significant, albeit temporary, advantage. However, because this technology is integrated into the widely used iVvy platform, it is likely to become “table stakes” very quickly.
Indeed, this creates a classic technology race. Early adopters win market share from slower competitors. Eventually, this forces the entire sector to adopt AI-driven responses as a defensive measure.
The Practical Barriers
For automation to work effectively, venues must have:
- Standardised Pricing: AI cannot guess “negotiable” rates without clear rules.
- Live Availability: The system must be synced with the venue’s calendar.
- Consistent Formats: Standardised templates are required for instant generation.
A Shift in Sales Skills
This deployment signals a fundamental change in the event sales role. As administrative tasks are automated, the sales professional of 2026 must move away from being a “booking clerk.” Instead, they must become a Consultative Partner.
The technology does not eliminate the sales function; rather, it raises the bar. Venues will increasingly need higher-calibre sellers who can use the time saved by AI to build deep relationships. After all, human intelligence is still required to navigate complex, high-value negotiations.
The “11-point gap” is no longer just a statistic. Instead, it is a call to action for every venue manager in the UK.



