Transcript Document
U.S. HISTORY
Late 1950’s Interstate Highway system completed and commercial
introduction of the Jet airplane.
1959-Las Vegas-Rotunda + 90,000sf exhibit hall
1960-McCormick Place first large facility
Real expansion in 1970’s making industry 40 years old
CEIR Census identifies more than 14,000 meetings with exhibitions
held each year.
10,000 are B to B events
67% are owned by associations.
FACILITIES
HOTEL TO EXHIBIT HALL
Show Room
Bellman
Catering
Banquet
Engineering
Housekeeping
Ambiance in Place
Concrete
Material Handling
Food Service
Furniture Rental
Utility Service
Cleaning Service
Ambiance Temporary
Number of U.S. exhibitions dropped from
11,094 to 11,041 or -0.5%
Added Mexico with 722 events
Total U.S., Mexico & Canada 14,541
More than 50% of all the exhibitions held in
the entire world
Average size in U.S. 47,984 NSF +25%
2,649 or 24% of U.S. events B to C
37% of U.S. events held in exhibition/CC
44% held in hotels
67% owned by associations
33% owned by media companies and
entrepreneurs
CEIR Index was down a record 9 consecutive
quarters
Index turned positive Q3/Q4 2010 & Q1,2 &3
2011.
In 2010, five sectors had positive YoY
performance
Losses in 2008-2010 combined 15%
compared to 2001/2002 loss of 5%
Overall back to 2000 level
Number of exhibiting companies and NSF sold
the biggest losers
CEIR INDEX 2011
Total
Q1
Index
3.1
Real GDP
2.2
Q2
1.0
1.6
Q3
2.6
1.5
New source produced economic analysis
New approach to calculating averages using
geometric method
Restated the first 10 years
Established new 2009 base year
Added a predictive element to enhance
projecting future performance
(1)
INSFt , j INSFt 1, j [(1 pch(SNSFt , j ) /100]
0.25
0.25
0.25
(2) TINt , j INSFt ,0.25
IATT
IEXH
IREV
j
t, j
t, j
t, j
(3)
Mi j = f (Oj, FDj, EMj, Zj, RCE, TE)
Deeper recession-peak to trough 5.1% not
4.1% as earlier reported
Improvement Q1 declined in Q2
Index outperforming GDP
Index slowed Q1 to Q2
Recovery varies by sector but on average 3%
a year if no further setbacks in the economy.
THE PERFORMANCE OF THE OVERALL EXHIBITION INDUSTRY
IN 2011 H1 WAS IN LINE WITH OUR PREVIOUS FORECAST.
Table 1: Overall Exhibition Industry
Metric
Net Square Feet
Exhibitors
Attendees
2008
2009
2010
20112/ 2011H1 3/ 20122/
20132/
-1.4
-10.9
-2.1
2.3
2.8
3.3
-2.0
-10.7
-1.1
2.1
1.9
2.8
-3.2
-7.5
2.4
2.5
3.4
2.8
-3.6
-9.6
-8.4
2.5
1.6
3.9
Real Revenues 1/
Total
-2.6
-9.7
-2.4
2.4
2.4
3.2
Note: 1/ Inflation Adjusted Revenues, adjusted by CPI for all urban consumers (CPI-U).
2/ Forecast
3/ Actual semi-annual percent change
3.0
2.4
2.5
3.4
2.8
CAGR,
2000-2010
-0.6
-1.3
-0.6
-1.2
-0.9
Generation X-Ages 28-39
Generation Y-Ages 19-27
Gen X-20 million
Gen Y-60 million
Combined…more than the baby boomers
Much greater net worth and more liberal spending
practices
Like the face to face experience to network
Consider attending a professional perquisite
See new products
Find new suppliers
Learn more about a product or service they
have heard or read about
Browse without sales pressure
56% E-mail
19% Direct mail
25% various
Event Messaging – What Resonates?
Be genuine…authentic…DO NOT overpromise
Communicate in small bites…easy to digest
Use social media CAREFULLY
Schedule messages early in the day
Create and promote event website
Upgrade websites
Measure results
Exhibitor Advice
Every visitor is important…treat with respect
Don’t speculate on degree of interest
Include younger workers among exhibit staff
Be prepared to handle young children (candy, play
area, computer games)
Interactive versus static exhibit
One-on-many versus one-on-one
Can the industry return to pre-2000 levels?
Will companies that have reduced to smaller
spaces return to larger spaces?
Will destinations cutting essential services
continue to subsidize Convention Centers?
How will destinations know when they can no
longer compete?