Demand Picking Up Planners' Perceptions - Business Travel News

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Demand Picking Up Planners' Perceptions

August 23, 2010 - 10:00 AM ET

By Jay Boehmer

A new survey by American Express, the Professional Convention Management Association and travel marketing firm Ypartnership shows that meeting planners are taking a turn into more positive territory, marked by meetings attendance and budget growth, following budget cuts, cancellations, declining attendance, bad publicity and faltering bookings that have beset the meetings industry since late 2008.

The survey also shows some lingering effects of the downturn, including ongoing cost-consciousness, a slow embrace of remote meetings technologies and some remaining, though waning, issues with perceptions of excess.

The survey, released in June and based on responses from 505 planners, about 56 percent from associations and 44 percent from corporations or independent firms, is a study in contrasts with a nearly identical survey unveiled a year earlier at the height of the downturn and a sign the meetings industry is on its way to recovery.

"We're seeing cautious optimism," said PCMA president and CEO Deborah Sexton. "It's not back to the early 2000s, and whether or not it ever goes back to that is probably debatable. We still have some bumps in the road ahead of us. We're figuring out as an industry how to work in and around those bumps in the road."

Compared with 2009, the bumps this year are fewer, shallower and more easily navigable, the study shows. Whereas 41 percent of more than 500 planners were coping with economy-prompted cancellations last year, only 6 percent said they expected to postpone or cancel meetings this year due to "current economic conditions." Last year, only 9 percent of respondents expected the number of meetings to grow in 2009, while this year 25 percent see the number of meetings growing. One-quarter of the respondents see their budgets for off-site meetings increasing this year, compared with the only 8 percent that saw similar growth in 2009.

Though full-on recovery and a resumption of the growth halted in 2008 remains to be seen, Sexton and others said the trend line is moving in the right direction, where 2010 is expected to be better than 2009, and 2011 better yet.

Ypartnership chairman and CEO Peter Yesawich, at the PCMA Education Conference in Montreal in June, said, "We have the wind at our back. Not only are the numbers rising, but they're rising at a greater rate 12 months down the line," he said. Versus 2009, planners expect attendance to rise a net 23 percent this year and 38 percent in 2011, the survey found.

"What is coming back fastest is demand from the corporate market," Yesawich said, noting that 43 percent of corporate planers will increase the number of bookings next year, compared with 21 percent of association planners. "That was the first to drop, it dropped the farthest and, as it turns out, it's the first to come back. As you can see here, it's coming back with a vengeance."

Meanwhile, the reduction in cancellations this year and next is saving planners a significant amount on penalties, as respondents on average expect to pay only $7,600 in cancellation fees for meetings booked in 2010 and $3,500 for meetings booked next year. "A year ago, the typical professional planner in America was prepared to pay over $81,000 in cancellation fees to get out of contracts," Yesawich said, but new figures represent "a remarkable shift in their opinion."

Though the worst of the downturn may be over, attitudes and practices established during the recession would continue to linger, he said, noting "a degree of conservatism that prevails on the part of professional planners in America still."

This story originally appeared in the August 9, 2010, edition of Business Travel News.

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