A large public festival and a private function are not the same job with different numbers. They differ in crowd profile, entry control, alcohol management, perimeter, emergency planning and supervision - and a plan built for one will not protect the other. Knowing what actually changes helps you brief the right security for your event rather than over- or under-resourcing it.
How do the crowds differ?
The crowd is the starting point for every other decision, and the two events could hardly be more different.
- A festival draws a large, anonymous public crowd over many hours or days. People arrive and leave continuously, energy builds and dips, and you are managing strangers at scale.
- A function - a corporate event, wedding or gala - is a known, invited group, usually for a defined window. The crowd is smaller, calmer and accountable to a host.
That single difference drives staffing, entry and supervision. Anonymity and scale at a festival call for visible structure; a function calls for a discreet, hospitality-led presence that protects the guest experience.
Entry: ticketing or guest list?
How people get in shapes your whole front-of-house plan.
- Festivals run on ticketing and scanning, ID and age checks, bag checks and managing large arrival surges without bottlenecks. Entry is a high-volume operation in its own right.
- Functions run on a guest list or invitation, with discreet reception-style checks and a focus on flow and welcome rather than throughput.
The skill at a festival is moving thousands of people through securely and quickly. The skill at a function is making accredited, controlled entry feel effortless.
How does alcohol management change?
If either event is licensed, RSA and crowd control work together - but the shape of the work differs.
- At a festival, alcohol is served at scale across multiple bars to a large crowd over a long period. RSA marshals and crowd controllers cover wide areas, and the cumulative-intoxication risk is significant.
- At a function, service is often table- or bar-based to a known group, frequently with a host managing the tone. The risk profile is lower but duty of care is no less important.
Understanding who does what is essential at both - see RSA marshal vs crowd controller. Either way, build your alcohol plan around the actual licence conditions in force for your event and venue, which vary by site and arrangement - check your current conditions rather than assuming.
Perimeter and access: how different?
The physical footprint changes the security model entirely.
- Festivals need a defined perimeter, controlled access and egress points, separation of public and back-of-house areas, and management of vehicles, deliveries and artist or vendor movements. Static positions and patrols cover a large, open site.
- Functions are usually within a venue or defined space, so the focus shifts to access control at key points, asset protection and keeping uninvited guests out without disrupting the event.
Our static guarding and mobile patrol work covers both ends - from a large festival footprint down to a single venue’s access points.
What about emergencies and evacuation?
Every event needs an emergency plan, but complexity scales sharply.
- A festival requires detailed evacuation planning for large numbers across an open site - clear routes, marshalling points, weather contingencies, medical coordination and crowd-flow management under pressure.
- A function needs a clear, simpler plan suited to the venue’s existing exits and the smaller group, coordinated with venue staff.
In both cases, the plan must be written, briefed and understood before doors open. An emergency is the worst time to be improvising.
How many staff, and who supervises?
Staffing is where scale shows most clearly.
- Festivals need larger teams across multiple positions, structured supervision, clear chains of communication and shift coverage over long hours. Roles span crowd control on the floor and static guarding for back-of-house and assets - in NSW both sit under the one Class 1A (Security Officer) licence.
- Functions need a smaller, well-chosen team - often a discreet mix of crowd control and guarding - with light-touch supervision matched to the host’s expectations.
Numbers should be worked out from the event, not guessed. Our guide on how many crowd controllers you need walks through the factors, and how much event security costs in NSW covers what drives the figure.
What about council and police involvement?
Larger public events typically involve more external coordination - council requirements, traffic and transport considerations, and liaison with police and emergency services. Private functions usually sit within a venue’s existing arrangements. The exact requirements depend on your event’s size, location and approvals, so confirm what applies to yours early in the planning.
How the CONTROL Method covers both
Whatever the scale, both events are planned the same way - through a written operational plan under our CONTROL Method: plan, brief, respond, report. The plan is what right-sizes everything else - crowd profile, entry, alcohol, perimeter, emergencies and staffing - so you get the security your event actually needs.
This is the backbone of our event security work, and we run it the same way for clients across Sydney and the Central Coast.
Plan the right security for your event
A festival and a function are different problems that deserve different plans. The way to get either right is to start from the event itself and build the operational plan around it.
If you’re organising an event and want to know what it actually needs, get in touch. We’ll work through the scale, crowd, alcohol and emergency picture with you and shape a calm, right-sized plan using the CONTROL Method.