Learn-skills.dev hackathon-organizer

Best practices, tips, and tricks for organizing successful hackathons. Use when someone asks how to plan, run, or improve a hackathon as an organizer — covering timelines, sponsors, judging, logistics, prizes, and post-event follow-up.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/NeverSight/learn-skills.dev
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/NeverSight/learn-skills.dev "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/data/skills-md/agi-ventures-canada/hackathon-skills/hackathon-organizer" ~/.claude/skills/neversight-learn-skills-dev-hackathon-organizer && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: data/skills-md/agi-ventures-canada/hackathon-skills/hackathon-organizer/SKILL.md
source content

Hackathon Organizer — Tips & Best Practices

Comprehensive guide for planning and running successful hackathons, from first-timers to experienced organizers.

Reference Files

  • references/planning-and-logistics.md
    — Timeline, venue, food, day-of operations, and post-event checklist
  • references/judging-and-prizes.md
    — Judging formats, criteria design, judge recruitment, prize strategy

When to Activate

  • User asks how to organize, plan, or run a hackathon
  • User asks about hackathon logistics, timelines, or budgets
  • User asks about sponsor outreach or management
  • User asks how to set up judging or prizes
  • User is planning an event on the Oatmeal platform and wants strategic advice

When NOT to Activate

  • User wants to use the Oatmeal API to create/manage a hackathon (use
    hackathon-cli
    instead)
  • User is attending a hackathon as a participant (use
    hackathon-attendee
    instead)
  • User is writing hackathon platform code

Planning Timeline

3-6 Months Before

  • Define your hackathon's identity — theme, target audience, size, format (in-person/virtual/hybrid), and duration (24h, 36h, 48h, weekend)
  • Set the date — avoid exam periods, holidays, and competing events. Weekends work best. Check local university calendars
  • Secure a venue — needs reliable WiFi, power outlets everywhere, breakout rooms, and a presentation area. Universities, coworking spaces, and corporate offices are common choices
  • Build your organizing team — assign clear roles: logistics lead, sponsor lead, marketing lead, tech lead, volunteer coordinator
  • Start sponsor outreach early — sponsors take 4-8 weeks to commit. Prepare a sponsorship deck with tiered packages (title, gold, silver, bronze). Lead with what sponsors get: brand exposure, recruiting access, API/product adoption

1-3 Months Before

  • Open registration — use a platform (like Oatmeal) to manage signups. Collect dietary restrictions, t-shirt sizes, and experience level
  • Recruit mentors and judges — aim for 1 mentor per 5-8 teams and 1 judge per 10-15 submissions. Judges should have diverse backgrounds (technical, business, design)
  • Plan the schedule — include opening ceremony, hacking time, workshops, meals, fun activities, judging, and closing ceremony
  • Order swag and supplies — t-shirts, stickers, lanyards, extension cords, whiteboards, markers, snacks
  • Set up communication channels — Discord or Slack workspace for announcements, team formation, and Q&A

1-4 Weeks Before

  • Send reminder emails — event details, what to bring, parking/transit info, schedule preview
  • Confirm catering — plan for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and midnight snacks. Account for dietary restrictions (vegetarian, vegan, halal, kosher, gluten-free). Budget ~$20-30/person/day
  • Brief your volunteers — create a volunteer handbook with roles, schedules, and emergency contacts
  • Test all tech — WiFi capacity, AV equipment, streaming setup (if hybrid), submission platform
  • Prepare judging criteria — finalize and publish so participants know what they're optimizing for

Day Before

  • Set up the venue — tables, chairs, power strips, signage, registration desk, sponsor booths
  • Do a full tech check — WiFi, projectors, microphones, streaming
  • Pre-stage food pickup/delivery — confirm all catering orders

Budget Planning

Category% of BudgetNotes
Food & drinks40-50%Biggest expense. Don't skimp — hungry hackers don't hack well
Venue15-25%Often free if sponsored or at a university
Prizes10-15%Cash, devices, subscriptions, or experiences
Swag & supplies5-10%T-shirts, stickers, lanyards
Marketing5%Social media ads, posters, email tools
AV & tech5%Rentals, streaming equipment
Contingency5-10%Always have a buffer

Cost per attendee benchmark: $30-75 for a 24h event, $50-120 for a 48h event.

Sponsor Management

What Sponsors Want

  1. Recruiting pipeline — access to talented developers. Let sponsors set up booths, give lightning talks, and collect resumes
  2. Product adoption — API challenge prizes drive real integration. Offer "Best Use of [Sponsor API]" tracks
  3. Brand visibility — logo on website, t-shirts, banners, social media mentions
  4. Content — photos, videos, testimonials for their marketing

Sponsorship Tiers

TierPrice RangeIncludes
Title$10k-50k+Naming rights, keynote slot, premium booth, logo everywhere, recruiting session, custom prize track
Gold$5k-15kLarge booth, logo on shirts/banners, workshop slot, prize track
Silver$2k-7kSmall booth, logo on website/banners, swag in bags
Bronze$500-2kLogo on website, social media mention
In-kindVariesAPI credits, food, venue, prizes (counts as sponsorship)

Outreach Tips

  • Personalize every email — reference something specific about the company
  • Lead with their benefit, not your need — "We're offering your team access to 200+ developers" not "We need money"
  • Follow up exactly once after 5-7 days if no response
  • Make it easy to say yes — have a clear sponsorship deck PDF ready

Marketing & Registration

  • Target 2-3x your capacity in registrations — expect 40-60% actual attendance
  • Start promotion 6-8 weeks before — social media, university mailing lists, tech meetups, Discord/Slack communities
  • Create urgency — early bird registration, limited spots, rolling acceptance
  • Share teasers — announce sponsors, judges, prizes, and workshops progressively
  • Leverage your sponsors' reach — ask sponsors to share on their channels

Day-Of Operations

Opening Ceremony (30-45 min)

  • Welcome, schedule overview, WiFi password
  • Sponsor lightning talks (2-3 min each, max 5 sponsors)
  • Rules, judging criteria, submission instructions
  • Team formation activity for solo attendees

During the Hackathon

  • Mentors on rotation — have mentors available in shifts, not all at once
  • Regular announcements — meal times, workshop reminders, submission deadline warnings
  • Activities between hacking — cup stacking, trivia, lightning talks, yoga. Breaks prevent burnout
  • Quiet hours — if overnight, designate a quiet zone for sleeping
  • Food arrives on time — nothing derails a hackathon faster than late food

Submission Window (1-2 hours before judging)

  • Give 30-minute and 15-minute warnings
  • Have a team troubleshooting submission issues
  • Close submissions on time — no exceptions builds trust

Common Mistakes

  1. Underestimating food costs — always budget 15% more than you think
  2. Too many sponsor talks — cap at 5 during opening. More = hackers tune out
  3. Vague judging criteria — "most innovative" means nothing. Define what innovation looks like
  4. Not enough power outlets — every seat needs power access. Bring extension cords
  5. WiFi that can't handle the load — test with expected concurrent connections
  6. Judging takes too long — expo-style judging (judges walk around) is faster than stage presentations for 20+ teams
  7. No plan for solo attendees — facilitate team formation. Many first-timers come alone
  8. Ignoring dietary restrictions — always have vegetarian, vegan, and allergy-safe options
  9. Starting late — respect attendees' time. Start on schedule
  10. No post-event follow-up — send a thank-you email with photos, project links, and a feedback survey within 48 hours

Post-Event

  • Send thank-you emails within 48 hours — to participants, sponsors, judges, mentors, and volunteers
  • Share a highlight reel — photos, videos, winning projects
  • Collect feedback — short survey (5-10 questions max) sent the day after
  • Publish results — use the Oatmeal platform to publish results publicly
  • Write a retrospective — what worked, what didn't, what to change. Share with your team
  • Maintain community — keep the Discord/Slack active. Announce the next event early

Virtual & Hybrid Considerations

  • Streaming is non-negotiable for hybrid — invest in good cameras and microphones
  • Virtual team formation is harder — use dedicated Discord channels or a matchmaking tool
  • Time zones matter — schedule core activities in overlapping hours
  • Engagement drops after 12 hours virtual — consider shorter formats (12-24h) for fully virtual events
  • Submission should be platform-based — video demos + GitHub links work better than live presentations for virtual
  • Have a dedicated "virtual experience" person — someone whose only job is making sure remote participants aren't forgotten

For detailed logistics checklists and judging setup guides, see the reference files.