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  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 01/14/2013 1 Comments

    IMEX America 2012 Generates $3.3 Billion of Business

    Analysis of business conducted by buyers at the second edition of IMEX America at the Sands Expo in Las Vegas last October reveals that buyers placed—or expect to place—US$3.3 billion of business as a result of attending the award-winning trade show. The figure is a 17.5 percent increase on the $2.8 billion achieved at and during the months after the debut show in October 2011.

    More than 1,000 hosted buyers and buyer attendees gave their feedback in the show’s exit survey which, according to IMEX Group Chairman, Ray Bloom, is “an exceptional response sample.” The post show surveys are used extensively by the IMEX Group to generate ideas and suggestions for refining IMEX America year-over-year and the high response rate reflects the enthusiasm for the show from the buyers.

    The post-show survey asked buyers a series of questions about their aims, objectives and behavior at IMEX America, including “what is the estimated value of orders you placed at the show and the estimated value of orders you expect to place as a result of the show?”—a question which produced the $3.3 billion value.

    “This is a firm endorsement of the high quality of buyers we attracted this year and proof, if any were needed, that the show delivers real business value and produces positive results for many months afterwards,” Bloom said.

    The post-show survey also revealed several other statistics about buyer behavior at the trade show. The introduction of a new, personalized hosted buyer email inbox on the IMEX website was widely praised for helping buyers to manage their communications with exhibitors. The new approach generated a single email every day to each buyer that alerted them to their new appointment requests. Of the 38,000 individual appointments made by buyers, 20 percent were made as a result of the improved email inbox. This new practice will now be rolled out to all buyers attending IMEX in Frankfurt in May.

    “I’m very impressed with IMEX’s focus on digital and what they’re doing to allow us as hosted buyers…to communicate on the mobile devices, on the Web before the show, during the show and, of course, way after the show," said hosted buyer Bryan Bruce of HPN Global. "Really, for me, the difference-maker has been the digital component of this show. It’s been very impressive.”

    It’s clear from this data that IMEX America is delivering on its promise of providing an active, high-quality global marketplace in which the meetings, events and incentive travel industry in North America can meet and do business, Bloom says. 

    "In the context of on-going economic challenges in many parts of the world, these figures are welcome and positive news all round," Bloom said. "The data also shows that the efforts we’ve made to perfect business interactions, such as the single email inbox and various other online appointment tools, are widely appreciated. They clearly provide added-value and true business efficiency at a time when buyers and suppliers want the process of qualifying each other and then doing business together to be as fast and seamless as possible.”




  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 01/06/2013 0 Comments

    A Student's Experience @ IMEX America

    This post is written by OPAL WADE, a student at the University of Nevada Las Vegas and an MPI student member.

    OpalWade

    The excitement grew as I dressed for the day: black slacks, black shoes and a bright red t-shirt with white lettering. Sure, not an outfit that screams fashionista, but it was crucial to the job at hand. I am a student of the University of Nevada Las Vegas, but for a week in October, I did not attend class, I walked into a new adventure. I met the team leader—a tall, friendly Dutchman in a full beard boasting a patch of grey—with a firm handshake. Eventually, more red t-shirts lined my periphery and we were briefed about our duties. I checked my smartphone one last time as I walked through the large doors of the convention center—it’s show time!

    Talk about sensory overload: tall ceilings, bright colors, huge signs, amazing architecture and massive lights. I followed a sea of professionally dressed individuals scurrying about to their destinations, eager to talk business. The reason for the bright red shirt was clear: One can get lost in all this. The white letters on my shirt read IMEX12 Social Media Team.

    This team was charged with sharing what’s good and gold at IMEX America via Twitter. Every time an exhibitor tweeted about something interesting going on at their booth, whether it was food, traditional dress, dancing or some other type of event happening, the social media team would descend upon it and tweet pictures and messages to drive traffic to that booth. All tweets were then shown on large screens throughout the trade show floor.

    Now, I’m a Facebook buff, but I had not previously done much with Twitter. I needed to get on the boat quickly in order to do my job efficiently. Paired with a friend, we navigated the first day of IMEX America. As the second day began, I’d become more comfortable with Twitter, although my initial plan was to do all the talking as my red-shirted partner composed all the tweets. That soon changed as Donald Hoos (the aforementioned Dutchman) asked that I do all the tweeting for the day. 

    As I was embracing this new communications tool, I was also thoroughly surprised with how many others onsite lacked social media skills. Some representatives didn’t even know their own company’s Twitter handles/usernames. I understand that not everyone is on the social media bandwagon, but if companies are going to bother having Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and Foursquare accounts then the entire company should be well informed on the basics, especially those getting out in front of potential clients and making contacts.

    In school, a lot is taught on new ways to market and communicate through social media. I see this as a significant issue currently affecting meeting professionals. Social media should be a part of everyone’s business as some of the more traditional forms of media are becoming passé. With social media there is a whole other target market that can be reached. In an atmosphere such as IMEX America, the use Twitter is a great idea but it needs more people to utilize it to be an even greater success—it did bring more business to the booths and again opened people up to other markets. That might be bettered next time around if daily social media-related activities or contests are implemented and if attendees and exhibitors are increasingly made aware of the potential value they could experience through their involvement.

    As a student I often wonder what I have to offer to this industry. After spending three days on the trade show floor with real meeting professionals, I realized that I can bring innovation and freshness to the business of meetings, whether helping implement training sessions to introduce more people to social media or coming up with creative uses of space at venues. Luckily, the possibilities for students coming up in the meeting and event industry are endless.

    "Sensory overload" Image (CC) Xiao C




  • Posted by Stephen Peters at
    12:00AM 10/15/2012 0 Comments

    IMEX12: Global Meetings Management Study

    Part of Smart Monday at IMEX America was the Global Meetings Management Study (GMMS) session. This was a discussion centered on global Strategic Meetings Management programs (SMMP) and the benefits, challenges and lessons learned, presented by Kevin Iwamoto, vice president of enterprise strategy for StarCite, a part of ACTIVE Network.

    Iwamoto showcased IBM's Paul Wakelin's implementation of the SMM program on a global scale.

    "It gave people the opportunity to see that it can work and it does work if you apply the principals and you design a program that fits within your corporate culture," he said. "It gave people the opportunity to realize it's more than a theory."

    The goal of the sessions was for attendees to understand the benefits of taking an SMM program global; prepare for any pitfalls and nuances of operating an SMM across various cultures and markets; and learn the steps needed to get started with a global rollout.

    "Paul was able to use [the SMMP] roadmap and kind of design each element of it with understanding the IBM culture on what worked and what doesn’t work," Iwamoto said. "The end result of that, using technology, is a successfully deployed global SMMP." 




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 10/09/2012 1 Comments

    IMEX12: Imagineering Tour Looks Toward the Year 2030

    Reimagining the spaces, places and ways we meet was the goal of this “tour and workshop on the move" lead by Jackie Mulligan, principal lecturer at The International Centre for Research in Events, Tourism and Hospitality, Leeds Metropolitan University; and Dr. Alexandra Kenyon, senior lecturer hospitality & retailing at The International Centre for Research in Events, Tourism and Hospitality, Leeds Metropolitan University. 

    Attendees had the chance to “see the now and imagine the future” with insights into the key trends that have emerged from the MPI Future of Meetings study. They were asked to imagine IMEX America in 2030: What will be different? How will it evolve? And what might that mean for you?

    "The future will be hyper competitive," Mulligan said. "This means that live events will have to be hyper real in order to get peoples' attention, to show them the value of attending a face-to-face event."

    During the tour, Mulligan and Kenyon discussed issues of security at events, the role that targeted audio will play during meetings, 3D printing technology and concerns related to food production and consumption.

    "There are three points concerning food that I see arising in the future," Kenyon said. "First, people will have to choose between organic or locally grown food. Organic may be not have the pesticides that locally grown food does; however, it may be produced hundred of miles away and have to be shipped to you, which can be bad for the environment. Second, by 2050, there world's population will be nine billion. New technologies will have to play a role in how food is grown. For example, skin grafting something like burgers will become much more commonplace in order to meet demand. Third, we'll see a rise in genetically modified crops, because they can include more vitamins and carbs to help feed the growing population." 

    In the end, participants were able to enhance their creative and future-thinking skills, transform the "meeting-scape" by understanding key trends, and gain key insights into one's own and others' perspectives on how to address and invent the future.




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 10/09/2012 0 Comments

    Support the Industry by Attending PURERendezvous at IMEX America

    On Wednesday, October 10, at 10 p.m./22.00, the MPI Foundation will host PURERendezvous—The IMEX America Night! Proceeds from the event will help fund important educational scholarships, grants and research benefiting MPI members and the meetings and events industry.

    The event will be held at one of America's premier nightclubs, PURE, and with thousands of IMEX America buyers and suppliers expected to attend, it will be a prime opportunity to expand your network, mixing with the industry's best and brightest.

    Not attending the IMEX America show? No problem. You can still purchase a ticket to PURERendezvous.

    To support the MPI Foundation by purchasing a ticket, visit: www.mpifoundation.org/rendezvous/imex.

    We look forward to seeing you there, and thank you in advance for supporting the MPI Foundation!




  • Posted by Jessie States at
    12:00AM 10/08/2012 0 Comments

    IMEX12: A Study in Green

    The tools exist for you to begin the journey toward sustainable events, according to industry experts in the sparsely attended Speed Seeds for Sustainability Workshop at IMEX - America’s Smart Monday. The session’s small crowd was disappointing in an industry that will face CSR head on in the very near future. (Yes, it’s not going away. Read MPI’s research at www.mpiweb.org/csr.)             

    Katherine Manfredi introduced attendees to the so-called Three Musketeers of sustainable events: ISO 20121 framework for sustainable event process management, APEX/ASTM performance-based checklist and doing and GRI EOSS sector supplement for measurement and reporting. Planners and suppliers can use MPI’s Sustainable Events Management Tool to measure the success of their efforts (www.mpiweb.org/portal/csr/semttool).             

    Due to the small size of the session’s audience, the planned presentation pleasantly evolved into a roundtable discussion among experts and delegates of common challenges—from getting a program started to green washing. Other discussions surrounded green audiovisual (with Midori Connelly of AVGirl), sustainable team building and sustainability missteps (John Chen of Geoteaming) and F&B (Mariela McIlwraith, CMM, of Meeting Change).




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 10/08/2012 0 Comments

    New Research on the Future of Meetings Reveals Key Trends and Offers Meetings Industry Strategic Takeaways

    The MPI Foundation unveiled first-of-its-kind research on the Future of Meetings, October 8, at IMEX America in Las Vegas.

    The insights were culled from in-depth interviews with leading thinkers on future trends, economists and experts in the fields of science, population, technology, digital media, business, policy and tourism. The trends they identified have been considered within meeting design, content, communication and distribution. The research will provide meetings and events professionals with the tools they need to achieve success in a rapidly evolving industry.

    “The Future of Meetings research initiative focuses on emerging issues facing the industry and cutting-edge information impacting the community,” said Cindy D’Aoust, COO and Interim CEO for MPI. “This is absolutely the kind of intelligence meetings and events professionals need at their disposal in order to thrive.”

    The MPI Foundation enlisted researchers at the International Centre for Research in Events, Tourism and Hospitality at Leeds Metropolitan University in the U.K. for the initiative. The report covers a broad range of issues facing the industry and offers insights on expected demographic shifts in the workplace, upcoming drivers of change and the impact of virtual and online connections on in-person events.

    “There is no question this research will have far-reaching implications for the meetings and events sector,” said Greg Van Dyke, senior vice president of global sales and marketing for PSAV Presentation Services, and an investment donor of the study. “It will help every one of us understand coming changes in the industry and empower us to respond strategically.”

    Following the Future of Meetings panel at IMEX America, the MPI Foundation will release a series of related research papers leading up to MPI’s European Meetings & Events Conference (EMEC 2013) in Montreux, Switzerland. At EMEC, a complete summary of the findings will be presented in conjunction with the launch of a comprehensive Future of Meetings toolkit.

    The Future of Meetings Thought Leadership research initiative is made possible with support from PSAV Presentation Services, Jumeirah Hotels & Resorts and Omni Hotels & Resorts.




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 10/08/2012 0 Comments

    Global Research Study on Corporate Social Responsibility Completed

    The MPI Foundation has completed the third and final phase of its benchmark Thought Leadership research study on corporate social responsibility (CSR), the results of which were presented at IMEX America 2012 in Las Vegas.

    For meetings and event professionals, the findings will enhance their understanding of CSR and demonstrate ways the policy can be put into practice ahead of consumer demand.

    The research is based on more than 2,300 surveys representing businesses and delegates from more than 150 countries and 90 interviews.

    Among the findings:

    • 80 percent of industry professionals feel that customer expectations for CSR will increase in the coming years
    • 77 percent of delegates say it pleases them to buy from ethically and socially responsible organizations
    • 68 percent of delegates say they will pay more to buy the products of a company that demonstrates its care for the well-being of society

    “The study delves into CSR at its deepest level, including the barriers and challenges to achieving it, best practices and engagement with formal and accredited programs,” said Cindy D’Aoust, COO and interim CEO for MPI.

    The study was conducted by researchers from the International Center for Research in Events, Tourism and Hospitality at Leeds Metropolitan University in the U.K. and was made possible through a generous investment by InterContinental Hotel Group (IHG).

    “The importance of this study cannot be understated," D'Aoust said. "The industry is clearly making strides in sustainability. Now we need to communicate our CSR credentials and commitment to stakeholders."

    Earlier phases of MPI’s research on CSR focused on current business environments, CSR market drivers, case studies and programs. These latest findings presented at IMEX America, will be followed by the release of a series of related research papers focusing on specific CSR topics.

    For more information visit www.mpiweb.org/csr.




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 10/06/2012 0 Comments

    Free the Idea Monkey

    Mike Maddock will show you how to manage the healthy and essential tension between the divergent and convergent thinkers on your team during his general session on Thursday, Oct. 11 (8:45 - 9:45 p.m./08.45 - 9.45), at IMEX America.

    We recently contacted him to learn more about his session and what you can expect to take away from it.

    One+: What mistakes do most professionals make when approaching problem-solving?
    Mike Maddock: People often turn to the wrong types of experts when solving problems. I love the quote, "I don't know who discovered water, but I am pretty sure it wasn't a fish." Most professionals try to solve challenges with really smart people from within their industry. Unfortunately, seasoned, industry veterans are too often experts at what isn't possible. Like water to a fish, they have grown unaware of the amazing possibility all around them.

    Industry experts also often overlook the changing needs of the market. This is because past experience or antiquated business models push them to support the wrong kinds of ideas. For example, dentists aggressively objected to teeth whitening products because they didn't promote "gum health." Meanwhile, consumers wanted white teeth and didn't care about their gums. Turns out, four out of five dentists were wrong.

    The lesson? Make sure to tap experts from outside your industry when trying to generate break-through ideas. I'll show you how in my presentation.

    One+: What are some easy ways to encourage a more innovative culture within an organization?
    MM: Walt Disney need Roy Disney, and Steve Wozniak needed Steve Jobs. The best companies strive to find a balance between their Idea Monkeys and Ringleaders. Balancing the highly creative idea people with the focused operators will create a culture that knows how to focus, fail forward and celebrate big ideas.

    One+: What are the main takeaways people should be able to get from going to your session?
    MM: How to be more objective so you can see a big idea that is right in front of you. How to find a yin for your innovation yang. How to balance an innovation portfolio. What's the most important talent for your and your kids to have if you want to be innovative–and how to get it.

    Mike Maddock's general session is sponsored by Travel Alberta.




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 10/06/2012 0 Comments

    How to Turn Customers Into Crusaders

    Doc Hendley will give a motivational and inspiring presentation at IMEX America on Wednesday, Oct. 10 (8:15 - 9:45 a.m./08.15 - 09.45), that retells the story of his journey from bartender and musician to accidental humanitarian.

    We recently contacted him to learn more about his presentation and why you should attend the session.

    One+: Why are you so passionate about the clean water movement?
    Doc Hendley: There are probably too many reasons to list here, but one, because water borne diseases kill more children in our world than anything else. And two, because responding to the water crisis is actually not that difficult. Digging a well, building a water filter, or installing rainwater harvesting systems, are all simple fixes that save countless lives.

    One+: How can everyday professionals step out of their comfort zones to make a difference?
    DH: In my mind this isn't just about my passion, which is water, it is about all of us pulling together to help those around us that can't help themselves. There are plenty of needs right here in our own backyards. I believe that all of us, no matter if you're a business person, a stay-at-home mom, or a student, have the unique ability to change the world. And we don't have to quit our jobs and go join the Peace Corps to do it. We can use the resources and gifts we have at our fingertips to make a lasting impression on the world. It may start with inviting a homeless person to lunch, or serving at the local soup kitchen, or even being a big brother or big sister to a child in your community. Whatever it is, we will never know our true potential unless we are willing to take that first step.

    One+: What are the key takeaways for attendees of your presentation?
    DH: It doesn't matter who you are, where you're from, or what you've accomplished or haven't accomplished in your life. Everyone has a unique ability to change the world around them.

    Want to know more, read our profile of him in the September issue of One+

    Doc Hendley's general session with breakfast is sponsored by Visit Myrtle Beach.  




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