Title: VENUE
1VENUE DESTINATION MARKETING SURVEY
2Objectives
- About the Survey and Respondents Key Findings
- Citywide Definitions
- Marketing Budgets, Operations and Strategy
- Marketing Support to Clients
- Supply and Demand, Hotel Rates
- Venues and Services Green Initiatives
- Challenges and Opportunities
3About the Respondents and Results
- Conducted in January 2007
- 135 respondents
- 40 are ACME members
- 62 are with venues 28 CVBs 10 hotels and
other - Findings broken out for venues, CVBs and all
respondents together - More venues are taking over all their own
marketing (becoming similar to CVBs) - Average Hotel Room Rate in Room Blocks 135.34
4Key Finding and Themes
- More of everything
- No standard definition of citywide
- On average, CVBs market 19 months out
- Top three success metrics
- 1.) Total number of booked hotel rooms
- 2.) Total economic impact
- 3.) Hotel community occupancy levels
- Conventions and exhibition attendance grew by
growing by about 2 percent in 2006.
5Key Finding and Themes
- Average Marketing Budget Venues 735,733
CVBs 3,523,312 - Over 50 of venues and CVBs bring community
leaders into the bid process - Over 50 of venues and CVBs maintain and
incentive fund - 60 of venues and 93 of CVBs provide show
producers with some type of marketing support - Hotels hold the key rates are rising supply
tight in many markets
6ACME Member?
7Organization Type
8Definitions of Citywide Event
- Uses more than three hotels.
- More than 100,000 attendees.
- A single event which utilizes more than 2
hotels. - All hotels in the city are being used for one
event. - A meeting that utilizes more than 2 hotels and
the convention center. - Broad appeal to all residents in city and
surrounding community. - An event that utilizes a large majority of
sleeping rooms, convention space and
entertainment venues within our city. - A group utilizing the Convention Center and two
or more hotels.
9Definition of Citywide Event
- An event using the primary convention center and
at least 2 downtown hotels. - 2,500 rooms or more peak night.
- An event that requires more than 50 of hotel
room inventory. - Uses more than 5 hotels.
- An event that utilizes one or more "clusters" of
hotel facilities to house participants. - A convention center user requiring the use of
multiple hotels for its housing needs no strict
definition as to how many hotels, but would state
that its more than 2 or 3.
10Definition of Citywide Event
- City wide event fills all of the hotels not just
convention hotels. All hotels include limited
service. - A group that uses the convention center and
more than 3 hotels properties. - An event that impacts all hotels throughout the
city/county. - City sponsored, open to general public.
- Multiple hotels used.
- Any Event that uses 3 or more hotels for their
program. - 600 rooms x2 nights peak, at 2 hotels in
convention district, using convention center.
11Definition of Citywide Event
- An event that books hotels conference rooms
"Citywide.
12Number of Citywides
- Average 21 shows
- Median 14 shows
- High 120 shows
- Low 1 show
- (excluding 0)
13Booking Window Controlled by CVB Months Out
Note Excluding 0
14Who Markets the Overall Destination
15Who Markets the Convention Center
16Who Develops the Convention Centers Creative
Marketing Materials
17How is Success Measured?
18Marketing Budget Size (Excluding High)
- Venues
- Average 735,733
- Median 250,000
- CVBs
- Average 3,523,312
- Median 2,173,458
- All Respondents
- Average 1,756,536
- Median 500,000
19How Marketing Budgets are Spent
20Which Mediums Drive Most Leads
21Which Mediums are Receiving More Spending (10)
22Online Marketing What are You Doing?
23Online Marketing Which Activities Provide Best
Leads
24Online Marketing Comparison (All Respondents)
25Have You Shifted Any Print Budget Online?
26Do You Involve Local Community Leaders in Bids?
27Are You Undergoing a Re-Branding?
28When was Your Last Re-Branding Process?
29Minimum Hotel Room Night Requirement
- Average 876
- Median 600
- High 3,000
- Low 150
30Do You Maintain Incentive Funds?
31How are Incentive Funds Allocated?
32What is the Source of the Incentive Funding
33Average Number of Salespeople
- Venues
- Average 4.1 full-time
- Median 3 full-time
- Average 1.1 Part-time
- Median 1.0 part-time
- CVBs
- Average 7 full-time
- Median 5.5 full-time
- Average 1.2 Part-time
- Median 1 part-time
-
34How are Sales Territories Set Up
35Do You Have a Satellite Marketing Office in
Another City?
36Satellite Marketing Office Staff and Budget
- Venue
- Average 251,200 2.9 staff
- Median 150,000 2 staff
- CVB
- Average 707,500 4.3 staff
- Median 600,000 3 staff
37Has Free Exhibition Space Been Offered at Least
Once in the Past Year?
38Hotel Supply, Rates and Revenues
Survey results match historical supply growth and
rate / revenue trends.
Source ACME, Tradeshow Week Research, Merrill
Lynch
39Do You Provide Attendance Marketing Support?
40What Type of Attendance Marketing Support CVBs
- Public relations support 96
- Adding event information to the CVB and/or venue
web site(s) 96 - Liaison with city, state, regional affiliated
groups or government agencies 83 - Enhanced signage in airport(s), around the city
before the event 79 - Hotel discounts/rebates 63
- Emails to potential local attendees 58
- Venue discounts/rebates 58
- Mailings to potential local attendees 46
- Entertainment, sports, cultural event or facility
discounts 42 - Assistance securing event speakers, keynoters
42 - Cash payments/rebates/marketing support fees 38
- Travel and/or lodging incentives, discounts 29
- Advertisements for the event paid for by the CVB
or venue 25 - Marketing to international attendees 13
41What Type of Attendance Marketing Support Venues
- Public relations support 87
- Adding event information to the CVB and/or venue
web site(s) 71 - Enhanced signage in airport(s), around the city
before the event 58 - Liaison with city, state, regional affiliated
groups or government agencies 52 - Emails to potential local attendees 45
- Venue discounts/rebates 42
- Mailings to potential local attendees 39
- Hotel discounts/rebates 29
- Entertainment, sports, cultural event or facility
discounts 29 - Assistance securing event speakers, keynoters
19 - Advertisements for the event paid for by the CVB
or venue 16 - Marketing to international attendees 16
- Travel and/or lodging incentives, discounts 16
- Cash payments/rebates/marketing support fees 13
42What Type of Attendance Marketing Support All
Respondents
- Public relations support 89
- Adding event information to the CVB and/or venue
web site(s) 81 - Liaison with city, state, regional affiliated
groups or government agencies 67 - Enhanced signage in airport(s), around the city
before the event 65 - Venue discounts/rebates 49
- Emails to potential local attendees 46
- Hotel discounts/rebates 46
- Mailings to potential local attendees 38
- Entertainment, sports, cultural event or facility
discounts 33 - Assistance securing event speakers, keynoters
30 - Cash payments/rebates/marketing support fees 22
- Travel and/or lodging incentives, discounts 21
- Advertisements for the event paid for by the CVB
or venue 19 - Marketing to international attendees 14
43Budget for Attendance Marketing Support
- Venues
- Average 85,333
- Median 50,000
- CVBs
- Average 137,000
- Median 25,000
- All Respondents
- Average 112,781
- Median 27,500
44Did the Convention Center Raise Hall Rates in
2006?
45Will Hall Rates Rise Again in 2007?
46Does the Venue Offer No-Compete Clauses
47Have New Services Been Offered by Venue or CVB?
48New Services Being Offered by Venue or CVB?
- Besides attendance promotion, some of the most
common relate to convention centers and these
include -
- Adding or enhancing business centers
- Expanding greeter, concierge and VIP desk
programs - Offering a single point of contact for all
services - Online housing
- Expanding special taxi and bus departure areas
- Valet parking at the venue
- Video conferencing services
- Wireless internet
- Streaming video for attendance building
49Has Your City Instituted City-Wide Green
Initiatives
50Does the Venue have Green Initiatives?
51Have Green Initiatives Helped Win Business?
52Has Lack of Green Initiatives Lost Business?
53Are You Going for LEED Certification? (Leadership
in Energy and Environmental Design)
54Biggest Challenges
- Besides concerns about being a second or third
tier city, budgets, exhibition space size and
quality, and number of hotel rooms, the main
challenges are - Available dates everyone wants the same
window for dates - Breaking through to reach decision makers
- Building destination awareness or trying to
change perception - Getting meeting planners to visit the market
- Helping event planners to market the destination
- Differentiating from competition having a
unique message - Third-parties that are between the client and
the venue/destination/hotels - Venue and CVB relationships
55Biggest Opportunities
- Marketing affordability and safety especially
in second tier markets - Continued economic development
- New hotel development, new venues and expansions
- Healthy hotel tax revenues
- Enhancing customer service
- Online marketing initiatives
- Customized, customer-specific marketing
- Strong face-to-face marketing and meetings
industry
56Biggest Challenges are the Opportunities
Branding, reaching event planners, hotel issues
and forming a cohesive group of citywide
partners Survey respondent quote Developing
and communicating those one or two key
descriptors that define our city's great overall
appeal and attractiveness as an attendance draw.
As hotel transient business has picked up, the
availability/size of room blocks has also become
more challenging.
57About the Survey
- All ACME Members will be sent a full copy of the
survey in March - The full survey has more information than in this
PowerPoint - QA
58About Michael Hughes
- Associate Publisher Director of Research
Services, Tradeshow Week - As head of Tradeshow Weeks Custom Research,
Michael produces proprietary research, consulting
and marketing projects for leading exhibition
industry organizations around the world. He
works closely with exhibition industry leaders,
corporate exhibitors, entrepreneurs, investors
and real estate developers to provide high-value
strategic information, analysis and
recommendations. His clients include nearly all
industry leaders in every segment of the industry
as well as leaders in the investment and
consulting community. Michael is frequently
quoted by major newspapers and national magazines
such as The Chicago Tribune The Los Angeles
Times Newsweek The New York Times and The Wall
Street Journal. In January of 2003, he was
selected as a Person to Watch by mins btob
newsletter. Since 1999, Michael has been a
presenter at over 60 industry conferences. He is
also the research director and editor of
Tradeshow Weeks syndicated Executive Outlook
research surveys. - Tel (480) 483-4471
- Email mhughes_at_reedbusiness.com