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International Congress and Convention Association New Ways of Working: Getting Closer to Clients David Kliman, CMP, CMM 44 th ICCA Congress & Exhibition 07 November 2005 iccaworld.com
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Information Sources Meeting Planner Customer Advisory Boards Interviews with industry leaders in USA, Canada, Mexico MPI – FutureWatch 2005 MPI & George P Johnson - Eventview ‘05 PCMA – 2005 Annual Meetings Market Survey Conde Naste Traveler Research Center Tourism Toronto – Client Survey Forrester Research 2005
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The North American Perspective Supplier/Client Relationships Types of Buyers representing: “Citywides” - very large conventions & events with 1,000 to 50,000+ attendees Trade Associations Corporations Specialty Markets such as Medical, Pharmaceutical & Incentive Independent and “Third Party” Companies
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The “New Normal” North American Trends Destinations “buying” the business Strong buyer demand for personalization of sales and service processes Risk/Crisis Management Transparency, Ethics & “Sarbanes-Oxley” Increased recognition of the economic and professional value of the Meetings Industry Return on Investment (ROI) Measurement Hotel Room Supply & Demand Third Parties/Outsourcing Procurement & Commodization Changing Demographics & Multi/Cross Culturalism Organizational Convergence Labor Unions - Convention Centers and Hotels Time Poverty Technology Integration Environmental Sustainability
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The New Normal North American Perspective Rise in level of professionalism The United Nations recognizes “Meeting and Exhibition Planning” as a profession in its 2005 International Standard Industrial Classification of all Economic Activities
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The Corporate Outlook MPI – George P Johnson Study Enhancing the customer relationship seen as #1 criteria for success by corporate marketing executives 96% use events to market products 93% view the importance of event marketing as “constant” or “increasing” 90% report steady or increased event marketing budgets
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Affluent Leisure North American Travelers What Matters Now Continued determination to travel Value and safety remains critical Willing to pay for personalized and unique services Adventure Seekers Second Homes/Fractional Ownership Family Travel Booking Cycle and Pattern Unique Destinations
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ON LINE TRAVEL TRENDS USA FACTS & FIGURES 32.1 million people will use the internet to book travel in 2005; up from 29.4 million in 2004 Generate US$63.6 billion spending in 2005; up from US$53 billion in 2004 Dynamic packaging - bundled purchased which allows air, hotel, car, attractions etc in one transaction Significant impact on the meetings market
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Best Practices - Getting Closer to Existing & Potential Clients Demand for Intense Personalization Develop and maintain a deep understanding of client issues Business Strategies Meeting Logistics Governmental Regulations Competitive Landscape Labor Situation Business Partnerships
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Best Practices - Getting Closer to Existing & Potential Clients Customer Relation Management requires sophisticated practice 67% of planners measure Return on Investment (ROI) after a meeting or event 68% of suppliers are NOT involved in the measurement process Get involved in the measurement process
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Best Practices - Getting Closer to Existing & Potential Clients Research, Research, Research Invest appropriately Follow up relentlessly
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Resources www.fastcompany.com www.fortune.com www.mpiweb.org www.pcma.org www.conventionindustry.org www.gpjco.com www.tech3partners.com www.klimangroup.com
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International Congress and Convention Association New Ways of Working: Getting Closer to Clients David Kliman, CMP, CMM 44 th ICCA Congress & Exhibition 07 November 2005 iccaworld.com Thank you!
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