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INTERNATIONAL CONVENTIONS and CONGRESS MANAGEMENT

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Title: INTERNATIONAL CONVENTIONS and CONGRESS MANAGEMENT


1
INTERNATIONAL CONVENTIONSandCONGRESS MANAGEMENT
2
MEETINGS AN OVERVIEW
3
LEARNER OUTCOMES
  • Know what comprises the meetings industry
  • Know the main categories of meeting initiators
  • Understand what the different meeting
    professionals do
  • Be aware of the purpose of meetings
  • Have an insight into the future of the industry

4
What Is Meeting Management?
  • There have been many attempts over the years to
    define a meeting and none has been universally
    accepted.

5
Terminology
  • Conference
  • Congress
  • Convention
  • Workshop
  • Seminar

6
Types of Meetings
  • The motive for each of the following types of
    meeting is different, so their aims, objectives
    and modus operandi vary (although there are areas
    of overlap). Planners and suppliers need to be
    quite clear which category of meeting they are
    planning.

7
Five Sectors
  • 1. Association Meetings Sector
  • 2. Corporate Meetings Sector
  • 3. Government Meetings Sector
  • 4. Speculative Meetings Sector
  • 5. Religious Sector

8
Meeting Professionals
  • Buyers and Suppliers
  • In-house meeting planner
  • Independent meeting planner

9
Suppliers
  • Convention bureau executive
  • Destination management company manager
  • Site or venue executive
  • Production company executive
  • Speaker agent
  • Interpreters
  • Other suppliers

10
THE ROLES OF THE PCOAND DMC
11
The PCO
  • Full-time dedicated meeting planner
  • Responsible for every aspect of a meetings
    planning and management
  • Retained by, reports to, and looks after the
    initiating organization
  • Independent PCOs may be located in agencies
    working for one or more clients
  • Can do the job more economically

12
DMC
  • Retained by PCO
  • Local expertise with good relationship with local
    suppliers, i.e., hotels, facilities, transport,
    etc.
  • Offer free advice on all aspects of the event
  • Usually small (often one-person) firms

13
THE CHANGING ROLE OF THE MEETING PLANNER
14
  • Increasingly, planners are shouldering
    responsibility for the outcome of their events
    and this involves a far greater range of skills
    such as
  • helping to establish goals and set objectives
  • undertaking research to establish the return on
    investment and
  • understanding the principles of adult learning
    and successful communication.

15
The Future of Meetings
  • The meetings industry has never been more
    buoyant, nor seen such growth. Surveys suggest
    its global value to be in excess of EUR800
    billion - and it is still growing. In Europe,
    the figures are just as impressive. So what are
    the reasons for this optimism?

16
Globalism
  • For reasons of
  • Commerce
  • Politics
  • Social interaction
  • Specialization

17
Technology
  • Although it has been suggested that video
    conferencing is replacing physical meetings in
    the corporate world, there is little evidence
    that this is the case for gatherings of more than
    about ten people. In the future there are likely
    to be more, rather than fewer, meetings, to
    counterbalance the sense of isolation that
    computer-based communication and teleworking can
    engender.

18
Demographic Trends
  • Indications are that, in the 21st century, the
    number of self-employed and freelance workers
    will increase, many working on a
    project-by-project basis.
  • At the same time, the continued demise of the
    traditional nuclear family will probably mean
    that relationships, networks and personal
    contacts become more important. Meetings will be
    one way in which individuals can foster these.

19
The Economy
  • A Europe united in the EU is expected to be an
    economically vibrant entity. Traditionally, the
    meetings industry has reflected the economic
    state of its parent nation so it is likely that,
    as standards of living improve and the corporate
    sector flourishes, conferences will attract
    larger attendance and will grow in number.

20
TYPES OF MEETINGS
21
LEARNER OUTCOMES
  • How meetings differ
  • The different demands of various types of meeting
  • How the objectives and decision-making processes
    vary between different types of meetings
  • How to project the financial opportunities and
    risks for each type of meeting

22
Three Basic Types of Meetings
  • Corporate
  • Association
  • Government

23
Key Variables
  • Objectives
  • Audience
  • Decision-making process
  • Marketing
  • Budgeting and finance

24
Corporate Meetings
  • Internal - where only employees are involved
  • External - clients or suppliers are involved

25
Corporate Meetings (continued)
  • Internal Meetings
  • Training meetings
  • Team building events
  • Information meetings
  • Internal product launches
  • Midterm or end-of-year staff meetings
  • Briefings
  • Motivation sessions

26
Corporate Meetings (continued)
  • External Meetings
  • Shareholders meetings
  • Sales meetings
  • Sales promotions
  • User - group meetings

27
Association Meetings
  • ASAE research suggests that association
    meetings account for EU 53 billion, or nearly 70
    of the estimated EU 78 billion spent annually on
    events in the U.S.A.

28
Types of Association Meetings
  • Government Meetings
  • Annual General Meeting (AGM)
  • Board and Committee Meetings
  • Other Meetings
  • Congresses and Symposia
  • Seminars and Workshops
  • Certification Programs Consensus Building

29
Government Meetings
  • Meetings initiated by government organizations
    make up for a sector of growing importance for
    the events industry. These can be on several
    levels, as depicted in the following examples.

30
Government Meetings (continued)
  • International meetings
  • Regional meetings, including those organized by
    the European Union, Nafta and Asean
  • National meetings, sponsored by national
    governments
  • Local meetings, sponsored by local or regional
    government

31
SETTING MEETING OBJECTIVES
32
LEARNER OUTCOMES
  • Understand why it is important to set objectives
    for meetings
  • See the meeting in an overall business or
    organizational context
  • Understand the principles of a situation analysis
  • Be able to identify meeting stakeholders

33
LEARNER OUTCOMES (continued)
  • Know the five principles for setting meeting
    objectives
  • Know the five guidelines for setting meeting
    objectives

34
The Significance of Objectives for Meetings
  • Without clearly stated goals and objectives,
    no organization can fulfill its potential and
    make best use of its resources.
  • So it is with meetings.

35
  • The meeting itself should have its own clear
    objectives which, in turn, will contribute to
    strategic success. These can be difficult to
    identify, as events will have a number of
    stakeholders to who the success of the venture is
    important. Each stakeholder may have their own
    objectives and it is important that the meeting
    planner is aware of these.

36
Meetings Have A Primary Purpose
  • Every meeting will be held for a primary purpose
    decided by the initiator. This might be
    familiarization (with new products or plans), the
    motivation of a sales force, professional
    education, raising funds, recruitment, or the
    resolution of differences.
  • The stated objectives will in every case be
    different, and will stem from the primary purpose
    of the meeting

37
Meeting Planners Objective
  • The success of a meeting is directly related
    to the amount of time spent on its planning and
    design. Equally, the internal stakeholders want
    to see value for the money and time they have
    invested.

38
Meeting Planners Objective(continued)
  • A successful meeting planner, who wants to
    achieve personal recognition and be regarded as a
    member of the management team, must demonstrate
    the desire and ability to control the meetings
    end product

39
Meeting Planners Objective(continued)
  • An empowered planner is a team leader, working
    with internal (and sometimes external) customers,
    who must understand the organizations business
    and how meetings may drive its business plan.
    The meeting professional must be a facilitator
    who, through meetings, moves the organization
    forward.

40
Background ResearchSituational
AnalysisMeeting Stakeholders
41
Situational Analysis
  • A situation analysis forms the basis for
    management goals, objectives and targets.

42
Four Phases of Situational Analysis
  • 1.Gather information about the current business
    environment. Establish what is wrong, if
    anything and, on the basis of this, decide
    whether or not there is a need for a meeting.
  • 2.Determine the desired changes in the business
    environment. Develop goals and objectives to
    address these.

43
Four Phases (continued)
  • 3.Determine how these goals and objectives may be
    achieved. Is a meeting the right tool, or can
    the goals be achieved more successfully through
    other activities?
  • 4.Determine how to evaluate whether or not goals
    and objectives are achieved.

44
Meeting Stakeholders
  • The changes that a meeting is intended to
    bring about must be achieved through people or
    groups of people who are of importance to the
    initiating organization. For the purposes of a
    meeting, the most important of these stakeholder
    groups consists of the meeting attendees. Even
    so, the first key step is to identify all those
    who have a vested interest in the success of the
    meeting.

45
Four Stakeholder Categories
  • Internal Customers
  • Attendees
  • Meeting Planner
  • Suppliers

46
Setting Goals and Objectives
  • The next step is to determine what the
    internal customers want the attendees to know,
    remember and do as a result of this meeting, and
    then to develop measurable objectives for each of
    these elements.

47
Setting Goals and Objectives(continued)
  • Know - refers to the knowledge that the meeting
    conveys through its agenda and content.
  • Remember - refers to what they absorb via the
    means of communication and adult learning
    techniques that are employed.
  • Do - refers to their reactions to the meeting.

48
Five Principles of Setting Objectives
  • The success of the event is measured through
    its objectives. These objectives should describe
    the desired outcomes of the meeting. The acronym
    Smart is often used to identify the five
    characteristics of good objectives.

49
Five Principles of Setting Objectives (continued)
  • Specific
  • Measurable
  • Attainable
  • Relevant
  • Time-based

50
Five Guidelines For Setting Objectives
  • 1.Describe the end (the product), not the means
    (process).
  • 2.Write a separate statement for each objective.
  • 3.Reflect the different levels of impact.
  • 4.Start each statement with an active verb.
  • 5.Remember that attitudes cannot be measured.

51
MAXIMIZING THE RETURN ON INVESTMENT
52
LEARNER OUTCOMES
  • Understand the importance of maximizing the
    return on investment
  • Be familiar with the principles of ROI
  • Know how to measure ROI

53
The Importance of ROI
  • In todays environment, organizations are looking
    at what provides strategic value.
  • Planners must demonstrate their value to an
    organization as well as the value of their
    meetings. It is important to be able to
    communicate with all the key people involved in
    the meeting, as results not only justify the
    meeting, but also your role in making the meeting
    happen.

54
STEP 1
  • IDENTIFY YOUR STAKEHOLDERS AND THEIR NEEDS

55
  • A stakeholder is any group of people or
    individual with a direct interest in the outcome
    of the meeting. They include
  • your organization (the meeting initiator)
  • suppliers
  • participants and
  • you.

56
  • For corporate conferences, your stakeholders
    might include any combination of the following
  • top management
  • the sales force
  • distributors
  • research and development (RD)
  • headquarters staff
  • company shareholders and
  • field operatives.

57
  • For association conferences, your stakeholders
    might include
  • volunteer leadership
  • members and non-members
  • exhibitors
  • function sponsors
  • trade media
  • invited guests and
  • speakers.

58
STEP 2
  • CREATE MEETING OBJECTIVES

59
  • Meeting objectives are statements that define
    the outcome of your meeting. They fulfill the
    needs of the stakeholders and support the overall
    goal of the meeting. Objectives are essential in
    the design, implementation and evaluation of any
    successful meeting.

60
  • Writing good objectives is not easy. The acronym
    Smart is often used to identify characteristics
    of good objectives. To remind you, they are
  • Specific
  • Measurable
  • Attainable
  • Relevant
  • Time-based

61
STEP 3
  • THE DESIGN AND USE OF MEASUREMENT TOOLS

62
  • In todays environment, everyone is analyzing
    how they can achieve faster, better and cheaper
    results, and also whether (and if) what they do
    moves them significantly forward in their core
    purpose. Today, marketing programs, training
    programs, market-share growth, and
    customer-member retention programs are all
    measured for success, so why not meetings?

63
  • When planning a meeting, it is important to
    ask meeting initiators and yourself the question
    Why do we need this meeting? What indications
    do you have that the meeting supports the
    strategic direction of your organization or that
    it makes optimal use of your organizations
    resources?

64
Measuring ROI
  • Here are some areas that a comprehensive meeting
    measurement would address
  • budget variance
  • booth traffic at exhibitions
  • advertising sales
  • increase/decrease in sponsorship
  • cost savings comparisons

65
Measuring ROI (continued)
  • satisfaction/dissatisfaction with venue
  • satisfaction/dissatisfaction with format
  • effectiveness of sales training
  • ability of audience to articulate the vision or
    strategy after the meeting
  • identification of trends facing the industry
  • sales forces ability to complete new procedures

66
Measuring ROI (continued)
  • successful/unsuccessful introduction of new
    marketing plans before the competition
  • successful/unsuccessful implementation of field
    force automation
  • members understanding of new awards and
    nomination process
  • how long it took to develop this meeting (cycle
    time)

67
Measuring ROI (continued)
  • follow-up sales as result of attendance
  • level of awareness of new products
  • perceived quality of workshops
  • perceived quality of entertainment and
  • how to extend the value of the meeting past the
    initial conference dates.

68
Using The Right Measurement Tool
  • The most traditional measurement tools are
  • the budget analysis and
  • written, post-meeting evaluations which rate the
    meeting.

69
Alternative Measurement Tools
  • Print or phone survey
  • Focus group testing
  • Testing audience knowledge
  • Tracking results
  • Volunteer surveyors/advisory groups

70
STEP 4
  • DESIGNING AND DELIVERING CONTENT

71
Designing and Delivering Content
  • There are three key elements
  • draw up a business plan
  • integrate adult-learning concepts and
  • exploit your value chain.

72
Drawing Up A Business Plan
  • A business plan is a detailed document that
    can be shared with internal stakeholders, such as
    senior management, and used throughout the design
    and development process to keep the team focused
    on the meetings goal and objectives.

73
What A Business Plan Should Cover
  • Date the business plan was created and/or updated
  • Event rationale
  • Meeting goals
  • Specific meeting objectives
  • Proposed meeting name or title
  • Budget

74
What A Business Plan Should Cover (continued)
  • Projected break-even attendance
  • Theme ideas (if necessary)
  • Proposed meeting dates
  • Location
  • An objective analysis that includes an
    environmental scan and collected market research
    to support a new meetings launch or an existing
    events growth

75
What A Business Plan Should Cover (continued)
  • Potential sponsor(s)
  • Use of technology
  • Proposed measurement tools
  • Overall meeting design concept
  • Target audience profiles
  • Development team (internal customers volunteer
    members)
  • Proposed meeting suppliers

76
STEP 5
  • DEMONSTRATE MEETING RESULTS

77
Complete Report
  • The final step in the process calls for a
    complete report demonstrating the meetings ROI.
    Before developing the report itself, decide
  • who will get the report
  • what it will contain, and
  • in what form it will be delivered.

78
SITE SELECTION 1
  • CHOOSING A VENUE

79
LEARNER OUTCOMES
  • Be familiar with the various types of meeting
    site or venue
  • Have a checklist of questions to ask yourself
  • Have a clear idea of the pros and cons of using
    each type of facility
  • Know how to prepare a request for proposals.

80
Selecting A Destination
  • Thereafter the PCO would be advised to
    approach the Convention Bureau representing these
    places for their information packs, before
    reaching a provisional decision - which, in most
    cases, will depend on the availability of a
    suitable venue.

81
Types of Venue
  • Convention Center
  • Hotel
  • Conference Center
  • Unusual Sites or Venues

82
Making the Initial Choice
  • Four categories of location
  • City center or urban area
  • Airport
  • Resort
  • Country

83
Creating A Short List of Venues
  • Basic Questions
  • What is the purpose of the meeting?
  • Who is attending it and what are their
    expectations?
  • How long is the event?
  • How many people are expected to attend?
  • Where has the same group of people met in the
    past?

84
Creating A Short List of Venues (continued)
  • Basic Questions
  • Where did it work best and why?
  • What didnt work at previous events?
  • What budget is available to accomplish the
    mission?
  • Where are the attendees coming from and how will
    they travel?
  • What is the meeting seeking to accomplish?

85
Additional Tips
  • If a venue which you have contacted does not
    respond to a request for information within 48
    hours, they probably dont want your business.
  • If, when you call a venue, the telephone isnt
    answered immediately or the staff are unhelpful,
    delete that place from your list.

86
Additional Tips (continued)
  • Ask among your colleagues in the industry for
    recommendations or advice. It is likely that
    they will have used sites in your selected region
    and can offer informed opinion.
  • When a venue contacts you, do the conference
    staff ask all the right questions? Are they
    eager and enthusiastic for your business - or are
    they tired and bored?

87
Additional Tips (continued)
  • Talk to the local convention and visitor bureau
    (CVB). They may not be able to offer a
    recommendation, but should give you the names of
    professional conference organizers (PCOs) and
    DMCs who have used their sites.

88
Sources of Venue Advice
  • Internet
  • Venue directories
  • Magazines
  • Venue-finding agencies
  • Destination management companies (DMCs)
  • Industry associations

89
Sources of Venue Advice
  • Airlines
  • Central sales offices of international hotel
    chains
  • Trade exhibitions
  • Offices of your parent organization

90
The Next Steps
  • Request For Proposals
  • Aim of the Event
  • History
  • Competition
  • The Facts

91
SITE SELECTION 2
  • INSPECTIONS

92
LEARNER OUTCOMES
  • Be aware of the importance of detailed site
    inspections
  • Understand the need for preparation before a site
    visit
  • Be familiar with typical layouts
  • Know what to look for in a venue and have a
    checklist
  • Know how to approach the task of inspecting

93
Preparing For An Inspection
  • Site inspection and site selection are
    inseparable. No professional meeting planner
    will select a venue for a meeting without first
    having inspected it for suitability.

94
The Site Visit
  • Quality of staff and service
  • Although you will be looking for a hundred
    things on your inspection visit, perhaps the most
    vital will be the standard of service. The
    facilities may well match the brief, but the
    venue staff can make or break an event.
    Expertise and willingness to cooperate plus
    enthusiasm for your project are key elements to
    look for.

95
The Site Visit (continued)
  • Assessing general service
  • Before the inspection tour begins, spend some
    time - on your own - in the foyer, reception and
    concierge areas, witnessing check-in and
    check-out procedures. Are they speedy and
    efficient?
  • Make a few general inquiries at the reception and
    concierge desks, and assess their response. How
    helpful and friendly are the staff?

96
The Site Visit (continued)
  • Assessing general service
  • Give room service a try. This can be a useful
    indicator of service and standards.
  • Look at the property from the attendees point of
    view. How would you rate and appreciate - or
    otherwise - service, staff response and amenities
    generally?

97
Meeting-Room Layout
  • The suitability of any venue may well hinge on
    its meeting-room capacities. If the seating
    layout for sessions has been decided, a close
    look at the meeting-rooms will be vital.

98
Most Common Meeting-Room Layouts
  • Classroom style
  • Theatre (or auditorium) style
  • Hollow square or oval-style
  • U shape, E-shape or T-shape-style
  • Boardroom-style
  • CafĂ© or cabaret-style

99
The Inspection Checklist
  • Whos who?
  • Reservations and front desk
  • Concierge and porters desk
  • Accommodation
  • Meeting-rooms
  • Syndicate/break-out rooms
  • Exhibition area

100
The Inspection Checklist (continued)
  • Banqueting
  • Secretariat/administration office
  • Provisional booking procedure
  • Location of venue
  • General
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