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to the


point Deborah Sexton President & CEO deborah.sexton@pcma.org


Join Us Hungry for more on what the future holds for meetings and how you can stay ahead of the curve? Make your plans now to join us in Orlando, Jan. 13–16, 2013, for Convening Leaders. Experience cutting-edge education and innovation in action while getting to know some of the best and brightest in our business. Registration is now open at conveningleaders.org.


for Meetings But what does the future hold?


E


ach November, Convene’s Meetings Industry Forecast (p. 55) gives us a chance to pause and reflect on the year that’s passed — and then take a deep breath as we take a look at what’s to come in the year ahead.


This time around, the assessments


for 2012 — not to mention forecasts for 2013 — give us good reason to breathe a sigh of relief. Exhibitions will end the year with 2.9 percent overall growth, and even more progress is expected in 2013 (3.2 percent growth), according to the Center for Exhibition Industry Research (CEIR). Meetings and events continue to grow in North America, with an average 4.8-percent increase expected in cost per attendee per day, along with an average 6-percent increase in group size, according to Carlson Wagonlit. On the hotel side, occupancy and


ADR are both up (5 percent, accord- ing to TravelClick). In 2013, both are expected to reach levels not seen since 2007, predicts Bjorn Hanson, divisional dean at NYU School of Continuing and Professional Studies. As a result, hotel capital expenditures are expected to increase by 33 percent next year. Even airline performance is remark-


ably better. The number of late arrivals, flight cancellations, and mishandled bags has decreased dramatically over the last several years, according to Air- lines for America. Although the picture is overwhelm-


ingly positive, the forecast demon- strates a few trends that are cause for concern. One is continued cuts to air service. Airlines for America reports that nearly 16 percent fewer flights were scheduled in the United States in the fourth quarter of 2012 compared to the same quarter of 2007. These cuts are expected to continue, thanks


10 PCMA CONVENE NOVEMBER 2012


to rising costs and constraints on rev- enue production. Another development to watch is


the influx of many new or soon-to- launch online hotel-booking engines. Every player — Google, Apple, YouTube, and Facebook — is trying to get in the hotel game. Though they may still be trying to work out the kinks, it won’t be long before these platforms start to make their mark — and are adopted by your attendees. In general, the sheer number of


high-tech advances expected in the near future is likely to change business as we know it. Meetings technology consultant Corbin Ball has said that one platform alone — mobile technol- ogy — “will likely change events more in the next five years than technology has in the last 20 years.” From new tools like phablets to the explosion of recent advances like voice assistants and cloud computing, there’s plenty of powerful new tools to take advantage of — not to mention to keep up with. How are you staying on top of the


latest advances? What’s on tap for 2013 at your organization? What trends are you most excited or concerned about? I’d love to hear from you. Email me at deborah.sexton@pcma.org.


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