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What Are We Measuring Anyhow?

This presentation highlights the need to assess the broader value of business events, beyond just their tourism contribution. It discusses the limitations of traditional measures and proposes alternative approaches. The presentation also explores the economic impacts of business events and the difficulties associated with their assessment. It emphasizes the importance of considering other dimensions and benefits, such as trade and investment impacts, educational opportunities, and international relations. The presentation concludes with the potential consequences of underestimating the value of business events and the need for change.

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What Are We Measuring Anyhow?

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  1. What Are We Measuring Anyhow? AIPC 2010 Liverpool 6 July Professor Leo Jago DeHaan Institute

  2. FACT • Business events make key broad-based contributions to economies BUT • Most of our efforts focus on the tourism contribution of business events CONSEQUENCE • Business events don’t get the appropriate recognition or support SOLUTION • Effort needed to assess the ‘beyond tourism’ value of business events

  3. Presentation Outline • Traditional Approaches to Valuing Business Events • Problems with these Approaches • Change Prompted by the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) • Business Events Council of Australia Study (BECA) • Business Events’ Contribution to Innovation • Melbourne Convention & Visitor Bureau Study • Next Steps

  4. Traditional Measures for Estimating the Value of Business Events • Delegate Numbers • Total Delegate Spend • Economic Impact of Delegate Spend • The sector has been “sucked into” narrow measures We are focusing on the wrong thing and often not measuring it well anyway

  5. Economic Impacts • Input-Output approach • Overly optimistic as no supply side constraints • Lower credibility with government in many regions • Computable General Equilibrium Modelling • More accurate estimate of true economic impacts • Requires a model of the destination & suitable expertise • Cost-Benefit Analysis • Starting to be employed in major events • Not seen in business events • Enables net benefit to community to be estimated • Not just impact

  6. Difficulties with Economic Impacts • Substantial variability in assessment techniques that are employed • Leads to credibility problems with government • Evaluations tend to be macro in focus • State, Province, or Country impact rather than city specific • Numbers often seen to be very large and meaningless • Generally ignore the inputs required to generate the impacts (except for CBA) • Must be considered in order to estimate true benefits

  7. Example • Australia’s National Business Event Study (2005) • Business Events generate $17.3 billion spending per year • Contribution to total employment of 213K • Contribution to Gross Value Added of $11.4 billion • Obtained substantial ‘traction’ with government

  8. More Fundamental Problem • These measures focus exclusively on the tourism impacts of business events • Many see the impact to only benefit hotels, convention centres and restaurants • Tourism benefits are seen to be more frivolous and have lower credibility than benefits from other sectors • Until recently, not even those in business events often promoted the additional benefits of the sector

  9. AIPC’s Guide to Calculating EconomicImpact Figures Whilst this Guide focuses on the tourism impact, it does identify the need to consider other dimensions: • “Don’t forget the other business benefits that result from congress centre activities. These can include such things as trade and investment impacts, new business opportunities and creating a showcase for local product and services, and may be of more direct importance to parts of the business community than spending data. • Along with business benefits, your congress centre also generates broader community benefits such as educational opportunities, technology development, professional and cultural development and enhanced tourism. In a time of heightened global tensions, the kinds of activities and events • Conferences and congresses promote international cooperation and create forums that help improve international relations, global communications and professional networking.”

  10. Key Messages for the Meetings Industry(Joint Meetings Industry Council) • Meetings and conventions generate uniquely high-yield economic benefits and attract influential visitors; • Meetings generate a wide variety of other economic and community benefits; • Meetings and conventions generate incremental tourism; • Meetings and conventions promote the profile of a city or region and its role in national and international affairs; • Meetings are directly connected to the key issues of the day; • Meetings play an important role in building better understanding amongst different groups and countries throughout the world.

  11. Consequences • Grossly understates the value of business events to the region • Understates the range of dimensions / variables / benefits • Understates the range of beneficiaries • Understates the total value • Connection with government tends to be through Tourism Minister (usually lower status in government) • Rarely do ‘Industry Ministers’ let alone the ‘Prime Minister / President’ see tourism / business events as key high profile drivers of economic development

  12. External Shock Prompts Change • Global Financial Crisis prompted government and companies to cut expenditure • Business travel, especially business events seen as a soft target • Leisure tourism could offset facilities losing business travel • Advances in technology seen to compensate • Attending business events seen by many as a ‘jolly’ • Forced the business events sector to reflect on its true value • A range of studies were commissioned to assist

  13. The Return on Investment of U.S. Business Travel(Oxford Economics) • For every dollar invested in business travel, companies realise $12.50 in incremental revenue • The average business in the U.S. would forfeit 17% of its profits in the first year of eliminating business travel • 28% of current business would be lost without in-person meetings • Business travellers stated that 5-20% of their company’s new customers were the result of trade show participation • In order to achieve the same effect of incentive travel, an employee’s total base compensation would need to be increased by 8.5%

  14. Oxford Economics Study(Cont)

  15. Managing Across Distance in Today’s Economic Climate:The Value of Face-to-Face Communications(Harvard Business Review) • A global survey of 2300 HBR subscribers • 79% said that in-person meetings are the most effective way to meet new clients to sell business • 89 agreed that face-to-face meetings are essential for “sealing the deal” • 95% said that face-to-face meetings are a key factor in successfully building and maintaining long-term relationships

  16. Why Face-to-Face Business Meetings Matter(Richard Arvey) • Historically, face-to-face meetings have played an important role in the social, and especially the political life, of Western and non-Western societies” (Schwartzman, 1989) • Meetings: • Facilitate verbal and non-verbal communication • Provide human contact • Underpin strong social and exchange relationships • Facilitate transparency and trust • Allow sideline conversations (important for other business)

  17. Why the Need to Demonstrate Size and/or Value? • To be taken seriously, an industry must produce credible figures to show its contribution to the economy • Tourism Satellite Accounts (TSAs) were the ‘coming of age’ for tourism • Underpinned investment in infrastructure • Government support for promotion

  18. Why the Need to Demonstrate Size and/or Value?(Cont) • Business events adopted this logic but it clearly undervalues the contribution • Even the UNWTO project to estimate value looked only at the tourism value • It also overlooks opportunities to leverage the value of business events

  19. Business Events Council of Australia Study • Examine business events’ connection with tourism • Explore the “beyond tourism” broader-based value of business events

  20. Four Dimensions that Underpin Value • Value to attendees • Value to employer organisations • Tourism value • Largely under control although standardisation needed • Comprehensive value to the economy

  21. Value for Attendees & Employer Organisations • Business events too often portrayed as ‘paid holidays in exotic locations’ • Many in the community have been to events like this which underpins their scepticism regarding the value of business events • Many events are held and/or attended through habit • Often there is no clear purpose or ‘take-away’ from the event • How can one determine whether it is worthwhile?

  22. Return on Investment (ROI) • Substantial effort has been made to adapt ROI technique to business events • An excellent technique for assessing and enhancing the value of business events to attendees and employers • Essential that all business events have a clear purpose with strong ‘take-aways’ for attendees that are communicated throughout the event and reinforced afterwards. • ROIs need to be undertaken on a regular basis

  23. ROI(Continued) • Although it requires some effort to calculate the ROI, it has been shown to enhance performance and output • The combined value of ROI across attendees and employer organisations is generally substantial and a useful inclusion in the total value of the business event

  24. Why the Link with Tourism? • Dates back to at least the nineteenth century where business events were seen as a way to promote destinations and fill hotel rooms • The attraction of delegate visitors and their spending pushed business events into Tourism Departments • Tourism Departments measure value through visitor numbers and spend, hence the flow on to business events • This impact is fairly easy to measure and short term so can be estimated soon after the event

  25. Beyond Tourism • The fact that the funding for business events has often come from Tourism Departments has meant it has been difficult to extend outside tourism • There is now a push for this to happen but it tends to be ‘rear guard action’ • “The meetings and events industry should rightly be thought of as a key component of the global knowledge economy, rather than as a branch of tourism” (Leigh Harry, 2009)

  26. Beyond Tourism(Continued) • Tourism is a key beneficiary of business events, not a driver • Business events are staged for specific reasons that have nothing to do with filling hotel rooms – this is purely a spinoff benefit • They are key knowledge creation tools • If business events are to realise their potential, there must be a mind shift on the part of government, destination and event managers about their real purpose and outcomes

  27. ‘human interaction, especially face-to-face interaction, drives innovation and inspiration. Accidental connections between leading thinkers studying different topics can unlock seemingly intractable challenges and insoluble puzzles’ (Harry 2009)

  28. Key Outcomes • Innovation • Improved organisation performance • Personal development • Increased productivity • Increased sales • New skills and knowledge • Awareness • Core Motives or Needs • Develop and share ideas • Educate/inform • Promote • Network / socialise • Change attitudes / behaviour • Sales and performance Business Event • Tourism Impacts • Direct spend • Job creation • Infrastructure investment The Role of Business Events in Enhancing Innovation • Maskell et al’s (2006) research argues that: • Meetings and conferences are temporary clusters for knowledge building

  29. The Role of Business Events in Enhancing Innovation (Continued) • Enhance science and technology: • which helps generate new forms of technology itself • improves understanding and access to it • helps improve local knowledge and skills by bringing outside information and technology into the host community • providing a vehicle for local businesses and professionals to access the latest developments in their respective fields. • Promote cultural exchange by providing forums and new opportunities to expose local culture to national and international audiences.

  30. Industry–science relationships and Face-to-Face Networking

  31. Firms with New-to-Market Innovations by Size, 2002-2004 Fostering Innovation International Comparisons with Australia: China’s R&D spending has grown by 22 per cent a year since 1996, compared to 8 per cent a year in Australia. Australia spends 2 per cent of GDP on research and development. Austria, Denmark, Germany, Iceland, Switzerland, Taiwan, and the United States spend more than 2.5 per cent; Finland, Japan, South Korea, and Sweden spend more than 3 per cent; Israel spends more than 4 per cent

  32. Fostering Innovation(Continued) Firms Collaborating in Innovation Activities, by Size, 2002-2004 (as a percentage of all firms)

  33. Fostering Innovation(Continued) University-industry interactions contributing to innovation (% firms)

  34. Australia’s National Priorities in Innovation Business Events Essential Ingredients for Priorities 2-7

  35. A Framework for Enhancing Innovation through Face-To- Face Business events ASSOCIATION CONFERENCES CORPORATE MEETINGS & INCENTIVES EXHIBITIONS GOVERNMENT MEETINGS Categories • Exhibition owners • Visitors • Exhibitors • Sponsors • Trade delegations • Media • Government host • Ministers • Parliamentarians • Bureaucrats • Visiting heads of state & delegations • Diplomats • Media • Academics • Professionals • Non-profit organisation hosts • Sponsors • Government representatives • Universities • Media • Employers • Employees • Distributors/franchisees • Corporate guests • Sponsors • Media Participants OUTPUTS: INNOVATION, TRADE, EDUCATION, PROFILE, PRODUCTIVITY, ORGANISATION CHANGE • Destination / tourism outputs eg: • Hotel beds • Airline seats • Venue space • F&B services • Shopping • Event managers & suppliers • Ground transport • Pre and post touring • Repeat visitation • Accompanying persons activities • Income generator for non-profit organisations • Development of industry positions and policy • Media profile of key community-related issues • Knowledge dissemination within sectors • Release of new research • Collaboration between colleagues • Community outreachprograms • New members • Performance reward • Collaboration on new products/services • Problem-solving • Corporate plans • Information • Product promotion • Motivation • Team building • Work skills training • Improved organisational performance • Improved individual performance • Business investment • Identification of product gaps in market • New contacts and collaborations • Export markets • Future business leads • Sales • New products and services to market • Encouragement of investment and business migration • Collaboration on common interests • Information exchange • Trade negotiations • Influencing national & international policy • Australia’s international diplomacy and profile Outcomes

  36. Host Organisation Post Event Collaboration Relationships and Innovation from Business Events Clusters Innovation Facilitates and underwrites meetings Increased Membership; Increased Income Delegates Attendance Business Events (BE) Speaking • Further spin-off BEs to: • disseminate new information • launch new products to market. Knowledge Contacts Employment Opportunities Professional Development Contribution to Science and Technology in Destination and Broader Community Legacies Improved Sales Approve attendances Contacts Setting Facilities Expertise Profile Investment Short term tourism impact Employers Host Destination Business Development for Destination

  37. Melbourne Convention and Visitors Bureau’s ‘Holistic Value’ of Business Events Study • Two year study tracking 4 business events held in Melbourne • Full economic evaluation at the end of each event • Follow up with key stakeholders for each event at 6 monthly intervals • Document the flow-on benefits

  38. Where to from here? Promote the tourism value of business events as the ‘tip of the iceberg’ Actively promote the ‘beyond tourism’ benefits of business events ‘Innovation’ resonates with government Seek ways to document the broader value of business events

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