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Crisis hits corporate meetings
Tue, Dec 02, 2008
Reuters

ORLANDO, USA - THE storm buffeting the US economy threatens to swamp the US$175 billion (S$267 billion) corporate meetings industry as companies seek to cut back on expenditure by reducing the number of conferences they hold.

By organising fewer big meetings in distant cities, companies can save millions on airline seats, conference hall bookings, hotel rooms and a range of smaller items.

But those savings - while smart for the companies - are provoking a crisis in the industry that provides the services.

'I've been in this business 40 years and I've never seen anything like this before,' said Mr Kevin Maguire, president of the National Business Travel Association.

'I call it the DDE for 'devastating domino effect'', said Mr Maguire. It is having an impact from cab drivers and florists to restaurants and street vendors, he said.

Ms Tammi Runzler, vice-president of convention sales and services at the Orlando Convention and Visitors Bureau, compared the situation to the weeks after the attacks of Sept 11, 2001, when fear of air travel gripped much of the business world.

A total of 64 per cent of companies globally will reduce spending on meetings next year, a figure that has doubled since August, according to research by Meeting Professionals International, the world's largest organisation for meeting executives.

A separate survey, by Mr Maguire's National Business Travel Association, presented a more mixed picture. It showed that about 38 per cent of US companies will maintain their meeting budgets next year, with the remainder about equally split between those planning to cut their budgets and those increasing them.

Companies that are increasing spending on meetings understand that during an economic slump training conferences and sales meetings are even more important, Mr Maguire said.

'AIG syndrome'
To make matters worse, many companies have slashed their meetings budget based on the experiences of insurance company AIG, said Meeting Professionals International President Bruce MacMillan.

AIG ran into a storm of negative publicity in October, when it flew top independent brokers and some of its executives to California for a lavish week-long retreat shortly after it received an US$85 billion government bailout. Brokers had earned the trip based on their sales prior to the bailout.

The situation was made worse by media coverage of a conference in November for 150 of AIG's top independent brokers at the Pointe Hilton Squaw Peak Resort in Phoenix.

In the hotel industry, such cancellations were known as 'AIG syndrome', said Mr Barry Brown, director of sales and marketing at the landmark Hotel del Coronado in San Diego.

Among other signs of a downturn in corporate meetings, new business leads are down 21 per cent from 2007 at the Orlando Convention and Visitors Bureau, according to Ms Runzler.

Business is down 15 to 20 per cent at Baskow & Associates, one of the leading destination management companies in Las Vegas. The company provides services for corporate events such as transportation to entertainment.

'Bad news is breeding more bad news. When companies see other companies stop spending, they stop spending,' said Mr Jaki Baskow, whose 32-year-old company employs 28 people.

Chicken not lobster
New Orleans, on the other hand, has seen a 10 per cent increase in business for 2008 over last year and expects to see a 7.5 per cent increase next year, said Mr Stephen Perry, president of the city's Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau.

That's because 75 per cent of his business is with large conventions held by national associations and only 25 per cent is from the more volatile corporate sector.

On a national basis, however, the consequences of the meeting downturn could be severe.

Employees paid by the hour, such as bellboys and busboys will be hit hardest by the slump, said Mr Bob Gilbert, president of the Hospitality Sales and Marketing Association International.

'We're also starting to see salary freezes for hotel executives,' he said.

And even hotel owners are now being hit by a combination of declining occupancy and falling average daily room rates, said Mr Robert Mandelbaum, director of research information services at PKF Hospitality Research.

That in turn will lead to layoffs among hotel staff.

Even so, some cities could benefit. Kansas City expects an uptick in 2009 business as it is perceived as an affordable destination, said Mr Bill Bohde, vice-president of convention sales and services at the Kansas City Convention and Visitors Bureau.

And corporate meetings will always be needed.

'Smart companies will still hold meetings,' Mr Baskow said.

'Instead of lobster, they might serve chicken.' -- REUTERS

 

 
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