Atlanta once again proved why it remains a cultural powerhouse. Curator Summit 2026 brought together brand architects, event producers, corporate marketers, and cultural curators to unpack what it really takes to build equity, protect Intellectual property, and scale events without diluting authenticity.
This past Saturday myself and Golar stepped out to the summit and gained a lot of meaningful connections and sat down for a dope experience amongst our peers at Terminus in Atlanta.
Across five dynamic panels, one message echoed clearly:
Without community, there is no success.
Here’s the full breakdown — including Panels 1 through 5.
Panel 1: Disrupting the Market & Building Demand from Day One
Panelists:
LaToya Shambo (Founder & Brand PartnershipsExpert, Black Girl Digital), Charles Kuykendoll (CEO & Creative Director Charles Beloved Productions), Sean McCloud (Martell Cognac / Diageo), Porchia Marie (Dope People Meet; A3C; Sports Activations) and Corey Moore (@tasteurbanatlanta; Atlanta Black Expo).
Panel 1 set the tone by exploring disruption, cultural ownership, and demand-building.
Charles & the R&B House Party Blueprint
Charles shared how RnB House Party disrupted the market by creating a culturally immersive experience that felt nostalgic, intimate, and community-centered. The brand eventually scaled into a tour and was later acquired by Blavity — a testament to building strong cultural IP before scaling.
The lesson:
Build something culturally undeniable first. Monetize second.
Sean McCloud: Culture, Cognac & Black Expo Legacy
Sean emphasized Atlanta’s historical role as home to the only Black Expo over 100 years ago — including initiatives like “For Sistas Only.”
This wasn’t just nostalgia. It was a reminder that:
Cultural events are legacy work Brands must integrate naturally Over-delivering is non-negotiable
He also stressed natural integration over forced sponsorship moments. Brands that fit organically win long term.
Core Principles from Panel 1
Build initial demand before scaling Know your overall event expenses Overdeliver every time Understand the community you’re serving Build around educational components Without community, there is no success
Events are not just parties — they are platforms.
Panel 2: Selling Events & Building Equity
Panelists:
Christian McKenzie, Kweilin Gordon, Michael Hezo Gonzalez, Sid Britton, Esosa Ighodaro
How Do You Sell an Event in 2026?
You don’t sell an event.
You sell alignment.
Key Strategies:
Get brands involved early Encourage organic posting Collect demographic data Always overdeliver Create initial demand
Creators were reminded that equity is built through innovation and demographic understanding — not hype.
Building Event Ecosystems (Beyond the Night Itself)
Esosa Ighodaro discussed the concept of building an events ecosystem business.
Michael “Hezo” Gonzalez (Moët Spirits GM – Spearhead Spirits African Brand Portfolio) and Kweillin (Greenwood Whiskey, Tulsa OK) reinforced product alignment within experiences.
A standout creative pairing discussed:
Swimsuits x Suya — showing that cultural crossovers can create viral experiential moments.
Protecting Your IP
Trademark your brand Use transparency among partners Structure contracts clearly Protect your true identity
As scaling increases, documentation matters more.
Scaling Advice
Don’t scale too early Collect and own your data Nielsen is your friend Use efficient processing systems Pitch via Zoom, not cold email Proofread proposals Bring clear value
Panel 3: Extending Sponsorship & Measuring Brand Impact
Panelists:
Makeda Bell (Microsoft Integrated Marketing; Culture Influence Team), Susette Brooks (Director Inclusive Marketing Penguine Random House), Ugochukwu Obilo (Co-Founder Discover Gidi, Experience Architect) and Keith Dorsey (Founder/CEO Young Guns Entertainment Collab Studios #Collaboween) Moderator: Corey “FLEX” Artis FLEXAVELI & Trail Blazer MasterMind Club
How to Extend Sponsorship Beyond the Event
Recap videos Amplified crowd content Creator amplification Brand-lift studies (survey small groups before & after activation)
Brands now expect measurable impact, not just vibes.
What Brands Want
Relationship building First-party data Open-minded collaboration Strategic fit over scale
Turning Attendees Into Advocates
Architect the guest experience Pivot when necessary Build for longevity
Events must convert participants into promoters.
Panel 4: Sales Strategy, Micro Events & Targeted Ads
Panelists:
Chantel George (Founder Sister In Sales, Handshake & Code; LinkedIn Sales) Aniesia Williams (Founder Dream Bloc), Jahmal Walker (Event Strategist & Founder, The Millenium Academy), Reggie Davis (Marketing Provare Group) and Kevin Gough (SVP, Pronghorn)
Start Small → Build Core
Jahmal Walker emphasized micro-events (2–3 first) to build intimacy before scale.
Know Roles Clearly
Who is the client? Who is the content creator?
Clarity expedites targeted advertising and improves ROI.
Waitlist Strategy
Implement waitlists from beginning to end to:
Create urgency Collect data Increase sponsor leverage Strengthen perceived demand
Panel 5: Cultural Cache, Partnerships & Knowing Your Numbers
Panelists:
Jeff Osuji CEO Eventnoire, Michael Barclay II (CVP Events, Sundial), Kenny Burns The Lifestyle Specialist and host of Kenny Burns Show, Jason Carter (Founder, One Music Fest) and Tecarra Carmack (CEO, Composite)
Panel 5 focused on maturity in business.
Know Which Trends Are for You.
Not every viral trend aligns with your brand.
Alignment > attention.
Ticket Sales Alone Won’t Sustain You
Jason Carter (One Music Fest) reinforced that successful festivals and large-scale events require:
Strong partnerships Cultural credibility Financial literacy
Borrowing Cultural Cache
How do you scale faster?
Partner with those who already understand the assignment.
Good partners:
Protect your vision Expand your reach Bring credibility
Know Your “SKU” (Know Your Skill)
Kenny Burns emphasized understanding your core competency.
If you don’t know your numbers, you can’t represent them correctly.
Track revenue Track expenses Track conversion Present data confidently
AI & Modern Execution
AI was discussed throughout the summit:
Be intentional Don’t copy and paste blindly Create strong prompts Edit for authenticity Use tools efficiently
Execution still requires people.
The Biggest Lessons from Curator Summit 2026
Atlanta’s Curator Summit made one thing clear:
Curated events are no longer passion projects — they are scalable ecosystems.
To win in 2026 and beyond, creators must:
Build initial demand Protect intellectual property Collect and own first-party data Overdeliver consistently Educate their audience Understand community deeply Scale strategically Build powerful partnerships Know their numbers Create experiences, not transactions
And most importantly:
Without community, there is no success.
Atlanta continues to lead at the intersection of culture and commerce — and Curator Summit 2026 provided the blueprint yet again.
