Skip to Fit Check
Menu
Cohesion case-study group energy from a hosted team-building event

Repeat-client case study

Mastereign Repeat Client Case Study

Mastereign is a strong repeat-client planning example from 2018 to 2026. The useful lesson is to keep the active-event direction while refreshing the format around current people, venue, timing, age mix, and supervision needs.

Client
Mastereign
Pattern
87 repeat bookings
Common formats
Archery, Bubble, Laser

Start with the example

Mastereign Pattern Fit Check

Choose the closest event shape. The recommendation shows what to borrow from the repeat-client pattern and what still needs a fresh Cohesion brief.

Decision framework

Use Mastereign as a repeat-planning reference

The page should help teams decide what to keep, what to adapt, and what to send to Cohesion.

Pattern

Keep the active direction

The repeat relationship supports an active hosted-event direction without locking you into one exact game.

Fit

Refresh the format each time

people, school venue, timing, age mix, and comfort signals should decide whether Laser Tag, Archery Tag, Bubble Soccer, or stations fit best.

Check

Make venue rules visible

School and training venues often need clear boundaries, facilitator notes, breaks, and attire guidance before the activity can be confirmed.

What to borrow

What Mastereign Shows

The public-safe lesson is repeat planning. Mastereign's pattern shows how an events-and-training you can return to active Cohesion formats while changing the exact activity around the group and venue.

How to use it

Use The Mastereign Example Well

Treat this as a repeat-client planning reference rather than a template that every event should copy.

Core lesson

A repeat you can keep an active-event direction while refreshing activity choice around each new group.

Borrow

Borrow the habit of starting from people, venue, timing, and participant profile before choosing the final active format.

Do not assume

Do not assume the same activity, school setup, facilitator coverage, or timing will fit a new group without checking the current venue and schedule.

Best fit

Education, training, school, youth-group, and repeat annual event teams who need a familiar but refreshed active format.

Check before copying the pattern
  • Current group-size band and age or staff mix
  • School hall, field, or indoor court rules
  • Covered-shoe, movement, hydration, and break needs
  • Facilitator coverage and team split
  • Whether the event needs one format or a light rotation

Readiness check

Mastereign-Style Planning Check

Tick what is known before using this case study as a planning reference.

Brief builder

Build A Repeat-Client Event Brief

Turn the Mastereign pattern into the details Cohesion can check quickly.

Proof and context

Related education and repeat-planning support

Use these routes when the Mastereign pattern needs more context around school groups, activity fit, or repeat event planning.

FAQ

Common planning questions

Why use Mastereign as a case study?

Mastereign is useful because the pattern shows repeat active-event planning across changing groups, venues, and activity formats.

Should my team copy the same activity mix?

Not automatically. Use the case study as a shortlist, then choose the final format around current people, timing, venue, weather, and participant profile.

Is this only relevant for schools?

Schools and education groups are the closest fit, but repeat annual events and training partners can also borrow the planning logic.

Next step

Turn the page into a brief

Use the planner if you already know the rough date, group size, and event direction.

Open Event Planner