1 / 37

MEEC

MEEC. Chapter Thirteen Directing the Future of Convention and Meeting Technology. Impact of the Internet. Uses of Technology Site selection Online registration and application practices, E-marketing Housing and bookings Logistics management Connectivity throughout buildings

kevlyn
Download Presentation

MEEC

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MEEC Chapter Thirteen Directing the Future of Convention and Meeting Technology

  2. Impact of the Internet • Uses of Technology • Site selection • Online registration and application practices, • E-marketing • Housing and bookings • Logistics management • Connectivity throughout buildings • Virtual trade shows, video conferencing, virtual meetings • Hand held devices, and • Other

  3. Site Selection VIA the Web • Site selection is the biggest use of the Internet • Websites that invite and reward are the next wave • Website design has matured from “brochure ware” to websites that sell • Twenty first-century Internet principals are more disciplined, demanding that a site make money by helping visitors find what they want.

  4. Site Selection VIA the Web • What to look for in a Site Selection Tool • Ease of navigation; • Robust search criteria, including location, brand, price, meeting space; • The total number of venues/properties listed on the site. Amenities and services available at a site; • An active link to a facility’s Web site; • Ability to download a brochure or fact sheet; • Access to floor plans, menus, meeting space capacities, meeting space calculator, virtual tours; • Reporting options.

  5. Site Selection VIA the Web • What to look for in a Request for Proposal (RFP) tool • Criteria that provides for • Meeting pattern options • Preferred and alternative date options • Sleeping room block information • Event and function requirements • Option to note response and decision dates regarding the RFP. • Ability to store and save specific search queries, save RFPs, and modify or update an RFP

  6. Site Selection VIA the Web • What to should look for in a Diagramming tool • Free software! • Scalable space and equipment (feet and metrics) • Are the rules of the industry — industry standards coded within the program? • Are accurate line-of-sight angles available? • Can you label items inside and outside of a room? • Can you place equipment outside of a meeting room or in public spaces?

  7. Site Selection VIA the Web • What to should look for in a Diagramming tool • Can you print an inventory report listing all equipment required? • Can the software plan a variety of seating layouts? • Can create customized setups? • Can you number banquet seating and produce seating lists? • Are online diagrams available at the facility’s Web site?

  8. Online Registration • Four categories of technology-based options: • The over the counter or OTC application • Meeting management software PC solutions • Web-based e-marketing and front-end registration applications. • Enterprise-wide applications.

  9. Online Registration • What to look for in Registration Technology: • Flexible-pricing options for setting and tracking registration fees • Options for branding marketing messages and event sites • Ease of importing and updating your marketing list • Knowing which version and Web browser will work with an online application • Annual support policy

  10. Online Registration • What to look for in Registration Technology: • How many simultaneous users can the site handle? • Does the system trap for errant or duplicate entries, • Can you integrate the solution with your internal databases? • How long does it take to get up and running? • Can you create sessions and combined event packages? • Can multiple pricing levels be set?

  11. Online Registration • What to look for in Registration Technology: • Can you print name badges in the format and for the hardware you utilize? • How does the system manage vendor information? • Will the budgeting interface support your needs? • How are hotel blocks managed? • Is there sub-block management? • How are cancellations and changes processed? • Can the system be integrated with third-party services?

  12. Online Registration • What to look for in Registration Technology: • Can you check out a meeting to manage while on site, or will you need ongoing Internet connectivity when using a system on site? • Protection of your data • Ability to segment and re-sort your marketing list or list of registrants • Ability to analyze return rates, bounce rates, and conversion rates • How the cost is set and calculated — by user, by transaction?

  13. Online Registration • What to look for in Registration Technology: • Availability of support when you need it • Cost for customization • Wait list management • How registrations acquired through offline channels are to be processed • Ability to personalize e-mail messages • Ability to process multiple credit card accounts

  14. E-Marketing • Three questions used to begin outlining a marketing map are: • Who develops and maintains meeting and event copy? • Who develops the event’s marketing plan? • How do you deploy information on your Web site, and how is your Web site used?

  15. E-Marketing • What to ask: • In what delivery channel formats do messages need to be readied? • How is information edited for each channel? • Are there items requiring secured transfer of personal data? • Where are the bottlenecks? • Will print response forms be personalized with unique identifiers?

  16. Housing via the Internet • Three basic categories: • Systems designed for real-time processing with integration into data warehouses. • Vendors that have carved out strategic relationships with industry-wide housing switches. • A database, often with front-end Web access, for holding attendee housing information.

  17. Business Intelligent Software • BIS is software designed to create databases, and offer processes for manipulation and presentation of data in a manner most effective for managers and other users.

  18. Business Intelligent Software • Must have the following characteristics and/or capabilities: • Full capability to sort, analyze and present data to reveal trends within a business. • The ability to integrate corporate data in order to support decision-making. • Capacity to gather and store all relevant information needed to make informed business decisions.

  19. Business Intelligent Software • Must have the following characteristics and/or capabilities: • BIS must integrate and transform raw data into organized knowledge. • The data must be easy to interpret allowing for more rapid decision-making processes. • BIS also highlights trends associated with past operating procedures and experiences in order to discover opportunities, and uncover weaknesses

  20. Business Intelligent Software

  21. Business Intelligent Software • Example – PowerCubes • Passkey • Market Player • Hotel Direct • b-there.com

  22. Convention Center Technology • First generation (G1) • “box with a dock” • Second generation (G2) • “pretty boxes” • Third generation (G3) • “boxes like very large hotel rooms” • Fourth Generation (G4) • are designed today with the surrounding culture in mind as well as a abundance of integrated high technology

  23. Convention Center Technology • Technology Impact • High speed and wireless Internet • Meeting spaces (rooms, hotels, & centers) • Marketing by cities, convention and visitor’s bureaus, and convention centers to prospective clients. • On-line • Conferencing tools • Registration and web sites for capturing credit card information.

  24. Convention Center Technology • Technology Impact • "Smart Card," a data-storage device providing centers and associations with valuable attendee information • Registration and contact information • Session attendance • Product purchases • Evaluation • Fiber-optic and broadband data and voice and video transmissions, allowing exchange of information with outside parties.

  25. Convention Center Technology • Connectivity Options • High-speed connectivity. to Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) • Design flexibilities. wired or wireless network & flexible bandwidth • Dedicated recording facilities. to facilitate both audio recording and session duplication • Videoconferencing functionality is an essential need for Web conferencing or Web casting.

  26. Convention Center Technology • Connectivity Options • Availability of “dark fiber” cabling allows companies to establish private networks outside of the convention center network. • Event boards. Plasma or LED event boards promote sponsors and communicate information to attendees. • Guest room connectivity linking back to the convention center. • Wireless LAN network access.

  27. Convention Center Technology • Connectivity Options • Cyber cafes and information kiosks provide meeting information, sponsor messages, industry news, product locators, e-mailing, message centers, on-site surveying, PDA download stations, and hand-held computing synchronization. • Audience response systems • Wireless lead retrieval and tracking systems. • Fully equipped business center with extended operating hours.

  28. Virtual Trade Shows • Guidelines to virtual reality: • Note services provided by other trade shows (physical and virtual) and offer these features online • Consider simple and easy design with useful and intuitive site navigation. • Keep the site simple and attractive. • Capture and qualify users

  29. Virtual Trade Shows • Guidelines to virtual reality: • Offer exhibitors a range of value-added services • Stream audio and video • On-site demonstrations and training • Preferred locations on the show floor • Provide attendees with value-added features • e-mail • chat rooms. • Apply basic marketing concepts and cross-promote your virtual site

  30. Virtual Trade Shows • Guidelines to virtual reality: • Provide online giveaways or discounted promotions. • Offer online credit card processing. • Clearly state your privacy policy • Make absolutely certain you secure all transactions. • Provide a database of vendors who are exhibiting online.

  31. Video Conferencing • Bandwidth falls into one of three categories: • Broadband • Greater than a Pentium III and a 128K modem • Sophisticated services - full-motion video/audio streaming. • Medium band • Pentium II with a 56K or better modem • Streaming video and audio is less reliable than broadband • Low band • Pentium I with a 28K or less modem • Need to be supported by audio conferencing services. • Referred to a Web-enhanced audio conferencing services.

  32. Video Conferencing • One-way session • No interaction, or delayed interaction through a call-in line for taking questions from remote participants • The Webcast presentation can be live or taped. • Two-way session • a high degree of interaction among a smaller team • Microsoft’s Net Meeting or Symantec’s PC Anywhere. • Applications require technical know-how

  33. Video Conferencing • Two-way, with high-end media • Two-way communications and higher-end media • Broadcast-quality lighting, sound, and production • An interactive web cast event • Point-to-point or point-to-multipoint • Broadcast to service centers where an audience can gather, or to other corporate locations • Broadcast via satellite or push through the Internet

  34. Video Conferencing • Third-party Service Providers • Offer technical, moderating, and scheduling services • Provide control and quality assurance • Offer useful utilities to validate that both hardware and connectivity are appropriate • Provide online technical assistance

  35. Green Technology – An Example • David L. Lawrence Convention Center Pittsburgh, PA • 30 to 50 percent obtained in energy savings • Water Conservation • Water taken from an under water aquifer • Used to reduce energy consumption for heating/cooling • All plants and landscape are native • No need for water sprinklers around the facility

  36. Green Technology – An Example • Energy conservation • the design of the sloped roof pulls up cool breezes • creates a naturally ventilated exhibit hall • Natural lighting will be used throughout the building • Blackout shades are available to darken rooms or to control temperatures. • Use materials that emit fewer toxins • 25% of the building is constructed with recycled material • Local materials used in order to cut down transportation costs.

  37. Review • Impact of the Internet • Online Registration • E-Marketing • Housing via the Internet • Business Intelligent Software • Convention Center Technology • Connectivity Options • Virtual Trade Shows, Video Conferencing • Green Technology

More Related