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© 2006, Educational Institute Chapter 4 Selling the Association Market Convention Management and Service Seventh Edition (478CSB)

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Presentation on theme: "© 2006, Educational Institute Chapter 4 Selling the Association Market Convention Management and Service Seventh Edition (478CSB)"— Presentation transcript:

1 © 2006, Educational Institute Chapter 4 Selling the Association Market Convention Management and Service Seventh Edition (478CSB)

2 © 2006, Educational Institute 1 Competencies for Selling the Association Market 1.Explain the importance of conventions to associations, and identify factors that association meeting planners consider when making a site selection. 2.Describe the different types of association meetings. 3.Identify characteristics of association meetings that are important for selling to the association market. (continued)

3 © 2006, Educational Institute 2 Competencies for Selling the Association Market 4.Identify who typically decides where to hold an association meeting and those who may influence that decision. 5.Describe the tools salespeople use to locate associations and to find information about the meetings associations hold. (continued)

4 © 2006, Educational Institute 3 The Meetings Market by Total Expenditures Total Direct Spending: $115 Billion

5 © 2006, Educational Institute 4 The Meetings Market by Number of Meetings

6 © 2006, Educational Institute 5 The Meetings Market by Attendance

7 © 2006, Educational Institute 6 What Association Meeting Planners Look For Adequate meeting space (prefer to use only one property) General sessions Breakout sessions Workshops and committee meetings Food functions (continued)

8 © 2006, Educational Institute 7 What Association Meeting Planners Look For Enough guestrooms Adequate exhibit space—Should be close to housing Attractive location Convenient for travel Convenient for doing other business Resort/recreation location (continued)

9 © 2006, Educational Institute 8 Kinds of Association Meetings Annual Conventions Most held with trade shows or exhibits Usually include general session(s) with breakout sessions Usually include food functions Several hotels may host them State and Regional Conventions May be sponsored either by national association or by state/regional associations (continued)

10 © 2006, Educational Institute 9 Kinds of Association Meetings Conferences Supplement the annual convention with a program on new developments Seminars/Workshops For training or continuing education Usually repeated in several locations Board and Committee Meetings Often held in premier properties to reward members (continued)

11 © 2006, Educational Institute 10 Cycle and Pattern Regular time cycle (annual, biennial, semiannual) Cycle often supplemented by regional conventions Usually held in Sunday–Wednesday or Thursday–Sunday pattern Most events held in September, October, or April–June

12 © 2006, Educational Institute 11 Monthly Meeting Pattern of Associations Five months with the most conventions: 1.October 2.May 3.April 4.June 5.September Five months with highest convention attendance: 1.October 2.September 3.March 4.February 5.January

13 © 2006, Educational Institute 12 Daily Meeting Pattern of Associations Starting Day of MeetingPercentage of Total Market Sunday21.1% Thursday17.5% Friday16.0% Wednesday15.0% Monday12.6% Tuesday9.5% Saturday8.3%

14 © 2006, Educational Institute 13 Geographic Restrictions, Lead Time, and Kinds of Sites Geographic Restrictions Groups sometimes limited to region or state by constitution Interests of program may further narrow location options Lead Time Conventions are usually planned 2 to 5 years in advance The larger the convention, the longer the lead time (continued)

15 © 2006, Educational Institute 14 Geographic Restrictions, Lead Time, and Kinds of Sites Kinds of Sites Depends on group size, complexity, and tastes and members’ affluence Accessibility is important Site should have a reputation as a vacation destination (continued)

16 © 2006, Educational Institute 15 Voluntary Attendance, Convention Duration, and Price Voluntary Attendance Properties can help promote the event Promoting spouse attendance means double- occupancy revenues Convention Duration National conventions average 3 to 5 days Smaller events last 2 to 3 days Seminars and committee meetings last 1 to 2 days Auxiliary events before and after conventions When exhibits are part of convention, convention lasts at least 3 days (continued)

17 © 2006, Educational Institute 16 Voluntary Attendance, Convention Duration, and Price Price Guestroom rates are the planner’s main price concern Align prices to attendee profile Past attendance is key to future selections (continued)

18 © 2006, Educational Institute 17 Average Duration of Association Meetings Duration of MeetingPercentage of Total Market 1 Day4.4% 2 Days16.5% 3 Days36.2% 4 Days22.6% 5 Days12.8% 6 Days4.5% 7 Days2.0% 8 Days1.0%

19 © 2006, Educational Institute 18 Association Director and Association President/Vice President Association Director Screens all suggestions and solicitations Smaller associations are often serviced by association management firms Meeting professionals are often employed by larger associations Executive director is a key person for initial screening Site selection committee often appointed by executive director Convention management firms work on a fee or percentage basis (continued)

20 © 2006, Educational Institute 19 Association Director and Association President/Vice President President/Vice President Mostly involved in the final decision (continued)

21 © 2006, Educational Institute 20 Committee Chair, Board of Directors, and Local Influences Committee Chair Sometimes gets involved in initial suggestion/screening Board of Directors Usually have power of approval Local Influences Local chapters often bid for national events Salespeople can appeal to local members’ civic pride Hotels often cover expenses for local delegate to present bid to national board Emphasize hotel staff’s expertise and desire to execute meeting properly

22 © 2006, Educational Institute 21 Finding Associations 1.Directories 2.Databases 3.Specialized periodicals 4.Hotel records Function book Records of groups that did not return to the property


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