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March 2002
Marketing
Charity Dividends
Susan Hatch

INTERNET MARKETING: Fast, Cheap, and Good
Mark Fisher

POPgrams: TARGETED AND TRACKED
Bob Andelman

The Storytellers
By Susan Hatch

General
A Byte at the Opera
Susan Hatch

Aussies Build a Meeting Site

CEMA Network

CLAUSE AND EFFECT
Tyra W. Hilliard

Convention Center Negotiations: Think Beyond Rate
By Bob Andelman

Design Showcase

E-Whiteboard Chalks Up New Tricks
Bob Andelman

EVERYTHING OLD IS NEW AGAIN
Cathy Chatfield-Taylor

FACILITY ANALYSIS: BEST SECURITY PRACTICES
Bob Andelman

fyi

fyi

KUDOS (X3) FOR WYNDHAM'S IT INITIATIVES
Cathy Chatfield-Taylor

LEGAL EASE: Contracts in a Buyer's Market
Jed R. Mandel

Let Them Eat Lunch
Dave Erickson

Meeting E-volution
By Kevin McDermott

MELBOURNE RELEASE 2.0
David Erickson

Mood Up, Attendance Down at MPI Conference
Bill Gillette

POST-9/11 PERSPECTIVE FROM THE PODIUM
Bill Gillette

REVIEW: 360 DEGREES WEB CRUISE
Michelle Bruno

Revisiting ADA
By Beth Negus Viveiros

San Jose: Uptown and Downtown
Rayna Skolnik

SHHHHH! WE'RE IN A MEETING

TECHNOLOGY EDUCATION FINDS A HOME

The Bay and the Valley

THIS IS NOT A REPLICATOR AND THIS IS NOT LIEUTENANT UHURA
By David Erickson

Total Control
By David Erickson

TRAINING: Strategies for Training Survival
Janette Racicot

TREND LINES
Susan Hatch Editor

Who Said That?

Will Your Hotel Be Ready?
Bill Gillette

 
Article
 
Will Your Hotel Be Ready?

Bill Gillette

Technology Meetings, Mar 1, 2002
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The one-two punch of September 11 and the stagnant economy has slashed the number of hotel development and renovations projects scheduled for 2002. Marriott will open 125 properties this year versus 170 in 2001; Renaissance Hotels & Resorts will open only 10 hotels in the coming year; and Starwood Hotels has also reported a slowdown. Industrywide, according to PriceWaterhouseCoopers, 6 percent of hotel projects scheduled for completion in 2002 and 2003 have been canceled or deferred. With this in mind, Jonathon Howe, senior partner at Howe & Hutton Ltd., Chicago, has the following suggestions to verify that the hotel will be ready on time — and that if it isn't, the planner will not be left without a venue.

  • The contract should stipulate that if the hotel fails to open on the agreed-upon date, it will find you a comparable hotel in the area at its expense. Above and beyond that, planners should negotiate a fee to be paid if the hotel doesn't deliver.

  • Demand monthly reports on construction progress, and require the hotel to pay for a consultant to deliver monthly reports on his or her on-site inspections.

The same advice holds for renovation projects, with the added note to insist on a renovation-disclosure clause (including potential compensation) to cover promises that no renovations will be in progress at the time of a meeting.



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