Title: Making Sense of Todays Meetings Industry: Impacts and Outlook
1Making Sense of Todays Meetings Industry
Impacts and Outlook
- Presentation to AOCA Congress
- Buenos Aires, August 2009
2Todays Presentation
- How have we been impacted?
- The convention centre perspective
- The planner perspective
- The exhibition perspective
- The longer term view
- Whats the business outlook?
- What have we learned?
- How is the industry evolving?
- Four issues to watch
3Impacts and Outlook
- The Facility Perspective AIPC Member Survey 2009
4Has your business increased or decreased over
the past year ?
5More or less confident of business prospects in
2009 than 2008 at this time?
6Changes in business attributed to the global
economic crisis?
7Types of business expected to increase /
decrease
8Impacts and Outlook
9PCMA Planner Survey Impacts
- Revenue lost from cancelled/ postponed meetings
in 2009/2010 - 781,000,000 in room revenue
- 2,500,000,000 in total revenue
- Reasons
- negative media coverage 41
- current economic conditions 37
- corporate downsizing 22
10Meetings Image a Major New Factor in the US
- 50 of US corporations surveyed by Maritz said
they saw significant non-financial risks to
holding events in current economic / political
climate - Meetings cancelled, downscaled in response to
media attention - Devastating to those with luxury or non- business
image (i.e. Las Vegas)
11PCMA Planner Survey Outlook
- 56 expect attendance in 2009/10 to fall below
comparable levels recorded in 2008 - 67 expect total 2009 meetings budget to decrease
compared to 2008 (average cut 23) - 41 will postpone, cancel or rebook meetings
already booked in 2009/2010
12PCMA Planner Survey Outlook
- Upscale and luxury accommodations likely to see
50 reduction in use in 2009/2010 - Planners intend to make greater use of
alternative meeting methods, including webinars,
teleconferencing - 53 of surveyed planners expect impacts to carry
over into 2010
13Impacts and Outlook
- The Exhibitor Perspective
14Tradeshow Week Survey
- Exhibitors are negative
- 81 have cut events from their 2009 show schedule
- 55 anticipate continuing to cut events over the
next two years - 74 would reduce exhibit space to conserve costs
- 65 have trimmed costs in the last year
15But Attendees are Still Positive
16Outlook 84 of Attendees will Participate in
More or the Same Number of Events Over the Next
Two Years
Survey Question Do you expect to participate in
more, fewer or the same number of conventions,
tradeshows and conferences in the next two
years?
Source Tradeshow Week Research Attendee Survey
June 2009 (309 responses)
17Outlook 88 of Attendees and Buyers Believe
Events will Continue to Be Critical for Product
Sourcing and Buying Over the Next Five Years
Survey Question Do you agree that conventions,
tradeshows and conferences will continue to be a
critical part of the business-to-business product
sourcing and buying process over the next five
years?
Source Tradeshow Week Research Attendee Survey
June 2009 (319 responses)
18Impacts and Outlook
- The Government Perspective
19Government Reactions Typically Counterproductive
- Politics of fear instead of logic
- Few understand the role of meetings in economic
development / recovery - Meeting cancellations, travel restrictions
imposed in many areas - Promotional budgets cut at worst time
- Capital projects cancelled although the time is
right for construction
20The Good News
- Significant impacts but coming from best years
ever - Signs of economic recovery already appearing in
many areas - Few association meetings cancelled
- Majority of delegates expect their attendance to
be stable or increase - No real momentum for virtual meetings
21The Good News
- Exhibitors still see meetings and exhibitions as
key tactic - Meetings, exhibitions will play key role in
economic growth and restructuring - Government policy changes could have a big impact
- We have an opportunity to demonstrate the value
of the industry
22The Longer Term View
23What Have We Learned?
- There are important regional and sector
differences - Business diversity is the best defence
- We're resilient but vulnerable
- Our owners and communities dont really
understand what we do - Need greater understanding, support for the
economic role of meetings, but. - We dont have ability to measure value
24Meetings are Evolving Anyway
- Increasing complexity
- Structural changes (reduced length, attendance
etc.) - Increasing need to demonstrate value growing
emphasis on measurement - Growing role for Internet technology
- More professional approach to meeting management
25Looking Ahead
- Four issues to keep an eye on
- The attendance factor
- The client relations imperative
- Evolving destination roles
- Our new image problem
26The Attendance Factor
- Attendance threatened by economic, time,
sustainability factors - Obscures the real impact of downturn
- A shared concern / opportunity with clients
- Calls for action, including
- Attendance building
- More pre / post promo / packaging
- Enhanced content and perceived value
- Measurability of meeting outcomes
27The Industry Relations Imperative
- Organizers are challenged by attendance,
financial, resource issues - Tougher negotiations, renegotiations
- Price, contract, payment issues at stake
- A new partnership attitude needed
- Opportunity to build stronger relationships for
the future - Flexibility, transparency are key
28Destination Relations are Evolving
- Hotel equation has shifted
- Centre owners expectations need adjustment
- Need to emphasize industrys broad economic
impacts, role in recovery - CVB relations need re-examination
- May have to distance centres from leisure
messaging
29The Image Issue
- Pharma-codes started the process
- Bailout funding accelerated it
- Negative image resonated with public
- We contributed by using leisure messaging
- 70 of planners concerned about current image of
meetings (PCMA) - Need to re-image meetings
- Also requires enhanced content, better value ,
measurable outcomes
30In Conclusion
- Weve seen lots of recessions this one was
different in some key areas - Government policy played a big role (bailout
regulations, travel restrictions) - Meetings image called into question, creating a
new issue - The industry was already evolving in a number of
ways - Better technological alternatives were available
31How Will Next 12 Months Look?
- A lot depends on recovery but many budgets are
already set - Association events will outperform corporate
provide stability - Attendance will be the big issue
- Exhibition, services spending down
- Booking, contracting likely delayed
- There will be a lot of renegotiation!
- New opportunities will emerge
32How Can the Industry Respond?
- Diversify business
- Work together on attendance building
- Take a more flexible approach to negotiations
- Innovate create value added services
- Help delegates document value
- Support your industry organizations
33Making Sense of Todays Meetings Industry
Impacts and Outlook
- Presentation to AOCA Congress
- Buenos Aires, August 2009