Planning a group outing is harder than it should be.
You’re trying to coordinate 6-10 people with different schedules, budgets, and preferences. Someone always hates whatever gets suggested. The group text goes silent. Two weeks later you’re all still saying “we should do something” without actually doing anything.
Sound familiar?
Here’s the problem with most group outing ideas: they work great for specific types of groups but fail spectacularly for others. Escape rooms? Great for competitive friends, terrible for mixed ages or corporate settings. Fancy dinner? Expensive and conversation-dependent. Bar hopping? Excludes non-drinkers and gets expensive fast.
You need an activity that works for almost everyone, regardless of age, budget, relationship dynamic, or social energy level. Something that creates shared experience without forcing constant interaction. Something that feels special without being complicated to plan.
Outdoor concerts—specifically, intimate rooftop shows with live music and beautiful settings—check every single box.
This guide explains why concerts work as group outings when most other ideas fail, how to plan them for different group types, and how to make them memorable for everyone involved.
Why Most Group Outing Ideas Fail
The Coordination Problem
The cycle: 1. Someone suggests getting the group together 2. Group text debates options for days 3. Can’t agree on date, time, or activity 4. Plan slowly dies 5. Repeat in three months
Why it happens: – Too many opinions, no decision-maker – Everyone’s schedule conflicts – No consensus on what sounds fun – Nobody wants to just pick something and commit
The Budget Problem
The scenario: Some people suggest nice dinner = $75 per person. Others are on tight budgets and feel awkward saying so. You either: – Price out half the group – Compromise on something cheap that nobody’s excited about – Split into subgroups (defeating the purpose)
The Personality Problem
The reality: Your group includes: – Extroverts who want constant interaction – Introverts who need breaks from socializing – People who want to drink – People who don’t drink – Different ages and energy levels – Varying interests and hobbies
Most activities work great for some of these people and terribly for others.
The “Does This Actually Create Connection?” Problem
You finally coordinate everyone for…dinner. You sit at a long table. The people at one end can’t hear the people at the other end. Conversation fragments into side discussions. Half the group bonds while the other half feels left out.
The activity didn’t fail. But did it actually bring the group closer? Debatable.
What Makes Concerts Perfect Group Activities
Everyone Can Participate at Their Comfort Level
The beauty of concerts: – Extroverts can chat before/after and during breaks – Introverts can enjoy music without forced small talk – Everyone’s experiencing the same thing (shared moment) – No pressure to be “on” the entire time
The music creates natural breaks in conversation. You can engage when you want, have comfortable silence during performances, and nobody feels awkward about either.
They Work Across Age Groups
The magic of tribute shows: – Sinatra appeals to 30-year-olds and 70-year-olds – Motown transcends generations – Classic music creates nostalgia for older guests, discovery for younger ones – Everyone can sing along to songs they know
Try finding another activity that genuinely works for ages 25-75. It’s harder than you think.
Built-In Shared Experience
Groups bond over shared experiences more than shared conversations.
A concert gives you: – Common reference points (“Remember when the performer did that?”) – Group memories (“Our night at the rooftop show”) – Inside jokes that develop naturally – Stories to retell later
These create group cohesion in ways that dinner conversations often don’t.
Scalable to Different Group Sizes
Concerts work for: – Small groups (4-6 people) – Intimate, easy to coordinate – Medium groups (7-12 people) – Big enough to feel like an event – Large groups (15-30+) – Can book sections or private events
Most activities fall apart above 8-10 people. Concerts scale beautifully.
Clear Start and End Times
The benefit of structure: – Everyone knows what to expect – Show starts at 8 PM, ends around 10 PM – Can plan dinner before or drinks after – People can duck out early if needed (or stay late)
No awkward “when is this over?” energy.
Works for Different Budgets
The flexibility: – General admission: $40-50 per person – VIP seating: $75-100 per person – Can share rides, split appetizers, etc. – People can adjust their own spending (drinks, food)
Everyone can participate at their budget level without it being obvious or awkward.
Group Types That Love Concert Outings
Friend Groups
Why it works: – Something to do besides the usual (bars, brunch, same restaurants) – Creates new memories together – Works even if you don’t see each other often – Easy to coordinate (one person buys tickets, sends links)
Best approach: – One person takes charge (seriously, just take charge) – Pick a date, buy tickets, send group text – Loose plan for dinner/drinks before or after – Don’t stress if someone bails
Friend group tips: – Make it a regular thing (monthly or quarterly) – Rotate who picks the show – Include the full evening (not just the concert) – Take one group photo, then put phones away
Corporate Team Outings
Why it works: – Not another trust fall exercise or forced bonding – Actually fun (people want to attend) – Sophisticated enough for professional settings – Creates positive association with company
Best approach: – Book VIP or group section – Make it optional (don’t force attendance) – Keep it to 2-3 hours (don’t consume full evening) – Maybe buy first round of drinks, let people buy their own after
Corporate outing tips: – Choose Friday evening or early Saturday – Don’t make speeches or turn it into work – Let people mingle naturally – Send post-event thank you email
ROI for companies: – Team bonding without eye-rolling – Something employees actually appreciate – Cost: $75-150 per person (reasonable for team building) – Creates positive company culture moments
Bachelorette / Bachelor Parties
Why it works: – Sophisticated alternative to typical party activities – Works for mixed ages and personalities – Built-in Instagram moments – Everyone can drink or not drink comfortably
Best approach: – Book VIP section if possible – Coordinate outfits (theme to the music era if you want) – Plan dinner before, bar after – Make sure bride/groom knows about it (surprise or planned)
Bachelor/bachelorette tips: – Choose upbeat shows (Motown, ABBA, Piano Men) – Consider the whole weekend—concert works great as one evening activity – Get there early for group photos – Tip the staff well (especially if your group is loud/excited)
Birthday Celebrations
Why it works: – Something different than usual birthday dinner – Creates memorable experience – Works for milestone birthdays (30, 40, 50, 60+) – Can accommodate various group sizes
Best approach: – Birthday person picks the show (their night) – Coordinate group tickets (everyone buys their own or someone collects) – Dinner before, cake/dessert after – Maybe coordinate a small surprise (venue sometimes helps)
Birthday celebration tips: – Tell the venue it’s a birthday (sometimes they’ll do shout-out) – Group photo opportunity is built-in – Don’t make the whole night about birthday person (let them enjoy the show) – Works better than surprise parties (less stressful, more fun)
Family Gatherings
Why it works: – Multi-generational appeal – Creates memories beyond holiday dinners – Something to do besides sitting around talking – Sophisticated enough for adults, accessible enough for younger family
Best approach: – Choose broadly appealing music (Sinatra, Motown) – Check age restrictions (some venues are 21+) – Book enough seats together – Plan simple dinner before (nothing too fancy)
Family gathering tips: – Older relatives often love tribute shows (nostalgic) – Gives family members something to bond over besides family drama – Take a family photo (one of few times everyone’s dressed nice and happy) – Can become annual tradition
Girls’ Night / Guys’ Night
Why it works: – Different than usual drinks/dinner routine – Creates excitement and anticipation – Works for groups that don’t see each other often – Built-in Instagram content (if that’s your thing)
Best approach: – Pick upbeat show (ABBA for girls’ night, Yacht Rock for guys’ night—or whatever) – Coordinate outfits if your group is into that – Pre-game with appetizers and drinks – Keep it to one evening (not full weekend commitment)
Tips: – Make it recurring (quarterly girls’ night/guys’ night tradition) – Rotate who picks the show – Sometimes split cost of birthday person’s ticket – Don’t let planning paralysis kill it—someone just pick a show
Anniversary Group Celebrations
Why it works: – Celebrating couple gets special night with friends – More fun than fancy dinner alone – Creates shared celebration energy – Works for wedding anniversaries, relationship milestones, etc.
Best approach: – Friend group surprises couple OR couple plans it themselves – Choose romantic show (Sinatra works great) – Maybe toast before show, celebrate after – Keep focus on the couple without making it weird
How to Plan a Group Concert Outing
Step 1: Someone Needs to Take Charge
The hard truth: Groups without a leader never coordinate anything.
If you’re reading this, you’re the leader. Here’s what to do:
- Pick a date (don’t ask for consensus—pick one that works for most people)
- Find a show that date (or nearby date)
- Send group message: “I’m buying tickets to [show] on [date]. Who’s in?”
- Give deadline: “Let me know by Friday if you’re in, buying tickets Saturday”
- Buy tickets
- Send logistics info
- Follow up week before
Don’t: – Ask for consensus on every detail (you’ll never get it) – Let the group text debate endlessly – Wait for everyone to confirm (some people don’t respond until last minute) – Apologize for taking charge (groups need leaders)
Step 2: Set Clear Logistics
Send one clear message with: – What: [Concert name/artist] – When: [Date and time] – Where: [Venue name and address] – Cost: [Ticket price] – Plan: [Meet for dinner at 6, show at 8, OR meet at venue at 7:30] – RSVP: [Deadline for confirming]
Example message: “Bought tickets to Motown tribute at [venue] on Saturday March 15th at 8pm. Tickets are $55 each. We’re meeting for appetizers at [restaurant] at 6:30pm, then walking to show. Let me know by Wednesday if you’re in and I’ll Venmo request you.”
Clear. Simple. No confusion.
Step 3: Handle Money Upfront
Options:
Option A: Everyone buys their own tickets – Send link to ticket page – Set deadline for buying – Coordinate seating if possible
Option B: One person buys all tickets – Collect money upfront (Venmo/Zelle) – Buy tickets once money is collected – Forward tickets to individuals
Option C: Split between a few people – 2-3 people buy small batches – Easier than one person fronting $500
Never: Front hundreds of dollars hoping people pay you back. Collect first, buy second.
Step 4: Plan the Full Evening (Loosely)
The framework: – Before show: Dinner or appetizers somewhere nearby – During show: The concert itself – After show: Drinks, dessert, or head home (keep it flexible)
Don’t overplan: – Loose dinner reservation (or no reservation, just arrive) – Know a few bars nearby but don’t commit to specific plan – Let the evening flow naturally
Do coordinate: – Meeting time and place – How you’re getting there (driving together? Meeting there?) – Rough budget expectations
Step 5: Confirm Week Before
The reminder message: “Reminder: Motown show this Saturday! Meeting at [restaurant] at 6:30, show starts at 8. Here’s the address: [address]. Parking info: [info]. See everyone Saturday!”
Why this matters: – People forget – Reminds anyone who was on the fence – Gives last chance to coordinate details – Builds anticipation
Step 6: Execute and Follow Up
Day of: – Send “see you tonight!” message – Be on time (don’t make everyone wait) – Take one group photo – Enjoy the show
After: – Send “thanks for coming!” text – Share photo in group chat – Maybe suggest doing it again in a month or two – Bask in the success of actually coordinating a group outing
Budget Management for Groups
The Budget-Friendly Group Concert ($40-50 per person)
What’s included: – General admission tickets: $40-50 – Maybe split appetizers before: $10-15 per person – One drink each at show: $10-15 – Total: $60-80 per person
How to keep it cheap: – Skip sit-down dinner (meet for apps or eat before separately) – General admission vs. VIP – Limit drinks to one or two – Walk or carpool (split parking)
Why it still works: – The experience is the value – Atmosphere costs nothing extra – Memories don’t correlate to spending – Everyone can afford this range
The Mid-Range Group Concert ($75-100 per person)
What’s included: – Better tickets: $50-75 – Group dinner before: $30-40 per person – Drinks at show: $20-30 – Total: $100-145 per person
What you get: – Full evening experience – Better seats – No cutting corners – Complete group outing
Best for: – Special occasions – Groups that can all afford it – When you want the full experience
The Splurge Group Event ($150+ per person)
What’s included: – VIP tickets or private section: $100-150 – Nice dinner: $50-75 – Premium drinks: $30-40 – Transportation: $20 – Total: $200-285 per person
When to splurge: – Milestone celebrations (big birthdays, anniversaries) – Corporate outings (company pays) – Once-a-year special group tradition – Bachelorette/bachelor parties
What makes it worth it: – VIP treatment – Premium experience – No budget stress – Everyone goes all-in together
Handling Different Budgets Within Groups
The problem: Not everyone in your group can afford the same amount.
Solutions:
Option 1: Set budget upfront “We’re keeping this under $75 per person total” People can opt out if that doesn’t work, no hard feelings
Option 2: Tiered participation Some people get VIP tickets, others general admission Everyone attends, people choose their budget level Meet up once inside
Option 3: Subsidize for some Birthday person’s ticket is covered Split someone’s ticket as a gift Corporate outings cover tickets, individuals cover their food/drinks
The key: Be transparent about costs upfront. Nobody should be surprised by expenses.
Making It Special for Everyone
For the Music Lovers
They care about: – Artist/performer quality – Song selection – Sound quality – Getting there early for good seats
How to accommodate: – Let them pick seats – Arrive when they want to arrive – Don’t talk through the whole performance – Geek out about music with them if you can
For the Social Butterflies
They care about: – Who’s going – Conversation opportunities – Group dynamics – The full evening experience
How to accommodate: – Plan dinner/drinks before and after – Coordinate seating so they’re near people they want to talk to – Give them time to socialize – Don’t rush the evening
For the Introverts
They care about: – Clear plans and expectations – Breaks from constant interaction – Knowing when things start/end – Not being forced into the spotlight
How to accommodate: – Send logistics in advance (no surprises) – Respect their need for quiet during performances – Don’t force them to be “on” all evening – Check in individually, not just in group settings
For the Budget-Conscious
They care about: – Knowing costs upfront – Not feeling pressured to overspend – Having control over their expenses
How to accommodate: – Be transparent about ticket prices – Make dinner/drinks optional – Don’t shame people for ordering less – Offer carpool options
For the Planners
They care about: – Knowing the schedule – Having logistics confirmed – Contingency plans
How to accommodate: – Send detailed info early – Confirm reservations/tickets – Have backup plans if needed – Answer their questions patiently
Group Concert Etiquette
Before the Show
Do: – Coordinate arrival times clearly – Be on time (don’t make everyone wait) – Come ready to have a good time – Bring the agreed-upon money/tickets
Don’t: – Show up an hour late – Bring uninvited plus-ones without asking – Flake last minute (people planned around you) – Complain about the plan you agreed to
During the Show
Do: – Sit with your group – Engage during appropriate times – Be present (phones mostly away) – Respect people around you
Don’t: – Talk through the entire performance – Get overly drunk and obnoxious – Ignore your group to make new friends – Be on your phone constantly
After the Show
Do: – Thank whoever organized it – Contribute to shared costs – Be game for post-show plans (or politely decline) – Suggest doing it again
Don’t: – Disappear without saying goodbye – Leave one person with the entire bill – Complain it wasn’t perfect – Ghost the group chat afterward
Best Concert Types for Group Outings
Motown Nights
Why it works for groups: – Upbeat, high-energy music – Everyone knows the songs – Impossible to be in a bad mood – Encourages dancing and singing along
Best for: – Bachelorette parties – Birthday celebrations – Girls’ night – Any group that wants FUN energy
Sinatra Tributes
Why it works for groups: – Sophisticated atmosphere – Multi-generational appeal – Classic elegance – Works for all ages
Best for: – Corporate outings – Family gatherings – Anniversary celebrations – More formal group occasions
ABBA Shows
Why it works for groups: – Pure joy and fun – Zero pretension – Group sing-alongs – Lighthearted energy
Best for: – Friend groups – Girls’ night – Anyone who doesn’t take themselves too seriously – Groups that want to laugh and have fun
Piano Men (Billy Joel/Elton John)
Why it works for groups: – Familiar songs everyone knows – Good range (romantic to upbeat) – Nostalgic appeal – Easy to sing along
Best for: – Mixed-age groups – Guys’ night – Casual friend gatherings – Groups who love sing-alongs
Frequently Asked Questions
How many people is ideal for a group concert outing?
Sweet spot: 6-10 people. Small enough to coordinate easily, large enough to feel like a group event. Under 6 feels like you’re just hanging out. Over 12 gets logistically complicated (though totally doable).
What if someone in our group hates the music?
Choose tribute shows celebrating universally known artists (Motown, Sinatra, ABBA). Even if it’s not someone’s favorite genre, they’ll know the songs and appreciate quality performances. Also: the experience and atmosphere matter as much as the specific music.
How far in advance should we book?
2-4 weeks for most shows. Popular summer shows or prime weekend nights might sell out faster. Last-minute (this weekend) is possible but limits options.
Can we get a group discount?
Some venues offer discounts for groups of 10+. Call the venue directly or check the website. Corporate outings especially should ask about group rates.
What if half the group bails last minute?
This happens. Set clear RSVP deadlines and money collection timelines. If people bail after you’ve bought tickets, they still owe you money (or you resell their tickets). Don’t let flaky people ruin it for those who committed.
Should we assign seats or let people sit wherever?
For small groups (under 8), sit together however you want. For larger groups, maybe loosely assign sections so couples can sit together, chatty people can cluster, etc. Don’t be rigid—let people move if they want.
What about people who don’t drink?
Perfect! Concerts don’t require drinking. Non-drinkers can order sodas, water, mocktails. The music and atmosphere carry the evening—alcohol is optional.
Can we bring kids?
Check venue age restrictions. Some are 21+, some allow all ages. Even if kids are allowed, consider if the evening vibe works for them (late nights, adult atmosphere).
How do we coordinate transportation?
Options: – Everyone meets at venue (easiest for large groups) – Carpool in 2-3 cars – Rideshare (split Uber/Lyft) – Public transit if available
Coordinate this in your logistics message. Have a “we’re leaving at [time]” plan so nobody gets left behind.
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