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November 2001
Marketing
Glowing Overseas
By David Erickson

General
ADDRESSING the IMPACT

COMPUTER EVENT MARKETING ASSOCIATION

CONSIDER, REVIEW, RENEGOTIATE: MEETING DECISIONS AFTER 9/11

Czech It Out

DIAL IN TO YOUR ATTENDEES
Bob Andelman

EXPO TECH EXPO: A BRAVE FIRST STEP
David Erickson

fast facts

Fight the Fear: Free Flights to DMA Show

fyi

Getting Back on Track
Sue Pelletier

GETTING READY FOR CEBIT?
David Erickson

Hope for the Best, Plan for the Worst
By Beth Negus Viveiros

IMARK PICKS UP THE DECORATOR TAB

LEGAL EASE: Force Majeure Takes Center Stage
Jed R. Mandel

Lend a Helping Hand
Bill Gillette

Lessons Learned
By Carey Houston

MPI Survey: Six-Month Outlook

new spaces

ON THE FRONT LINES OF NORMAL
Susan Hatch Editor

one cool idea

one cool idea
David Erickson

ONLINE MEETINGS: NO FLIGHTS REQUIRED
Kevin McDermott

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

Practically Paperless
By Susan Hatch

Q&A

Safety First
By Megan Rowe

SAN FRAN SUMMIT ON TERROR IMPACT

THE MOTIVATION SHOW: NOT QUITE BUSINESS AS NORMAL
Betsy Bair

The Show Must Go On (line)
By Susan Hatch

TRAINING: Questions to Expect When Bringing in Experts
Janette Racicot

UNCHARTED TERRITORY

WHERE WILL MEETINGS GO FROM HERE?
Bill Gillette

WIRELESS ANAHEIM
Bridget Mintz Testa

www.specialevents.com

 
Article
 
WHERE WILL MEETINGS GO FROM HERE?

Bill Gillette

Technology Meetings, Nov 1, 2001
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How can anyone predict the impact the war on terrorism will have on meetings and business travel? “It's like trying to gaze into a crystal ball while it's rolling,” is how Laurie Armstrong, spokeswoman for the San Francisco Convention & Visitors Bureau, puts it.

Hit hardest, of course, have been New York and Washington, D.C. “No one knows when people will feel better about traveling,” says Jonathan Tisch, president and CEO of New York-based Loews Hotels, in early October. “My gut feeling is that with the holidays coming up, you'll see things start to return to a more normal level.”

Like other major New York hotel operators, Loews, which operates four hotels in New York and two in Washington, D.C., is working to ensure a return to whatever “normal” may mean for future meeting business, as well as to minimize losses. “We've established a policy whereby anyone can postpone a meeting scheduled between September 12 and November 30 with no penalty, as long as the event is rescheduled before December 31, 2002. I'd say that's pretty much in the middle of what other hotels are doing,” says Charlotte St. Martin, the company's executive vice president of marketing. “So far, more than 50 percent of our meetings that postponed have rescheduled.”

There are indications that meetings and business travel are gaining momentum. While New York hotel occupancies dipped radically in the days after September 11, they were back up to 54.6 percent by the end of September. “On the most basic level, business appears to be coming back,” reports Mark Lomanno, president of Smith Travel Research. Before 9/11, STR had projected a year-end nationwide occupancy rate of 63.7 percent, which it has since lowered to 60.7 percent — a substantial impact, but, if it holds, not a devastating one.

In Washington, Brian Ullman, director of marketing and communications for the Washington, D.C., Convention and Tourism Corp., reports more meeting dates being rescheduled than canceled. “People are coming in as a patriotic gesture,” he says. “We want to see that feeling spread to the meeting industry. There's no time like now and the coming weeks and months to come to Washington to show support and unity.”

News is similar in other cities. In Philadelphia, all events scheduled for 2002 are still on — including 27 citywide conventions. In Orlando, more than 60 percent of the groups that canceled right after 9/11 are in discussions about rebooking, according to Orlando CVB President William Peeper.



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