plenary THE INTERSECTION Meeting at High Speeds I
f you want to see a gathering of meet- ing professionals “light up like there are fireworks going off in the room,”
just mention the topic of Internet access at meetings, said Michael Owen, president of Nashville- based Eventgenuity. But despite the avid
interest, there hasn’t been a rich enough conversation about the subject, according to Owen, a member of the year-old Bandwidth and Connectivity Workgroup, which is a subgroup of the Convention Industry Council’s APEX Stan- dards Review Council. As an industry, “we don’t know how to talk about [Internet access],” he said. “The sales folks don’t know how to talk about it and planners don’t know how to talk about it.” Part of the problem, he added, is that
them. “It’s not like you’re going to have to give [attendees] enough bandwidth to download [‘Here Comes] Honey Boo Boo,’” Owen said, “but if you are going to encourage them to be connected, you’re going to have to give them enough bandwidth.” One of the first steps
meeting professionals can take is simply to become aware of the need to become educated on the fast-chang- ing topic. “It’s an ongoing conversation,” Owen said. In order to negotiate
Michael Owen ‘People don’t know what they don’t know. But when you begin to have those conversations [about high-speed Internet access], light bulbs go off.’
effectively about high-speed Internet access, planners must understand their own needs and those of their attendees — including vendors. Just as planners conduct post-event audits on food-and-beverage and room
Internet access at a meeting too often is reduced to a simple question: Is there free Wi-Fi? “Internet access is not a yes-or-no question,” Owen said. Even if the answer to the question of whether a venue will supply free Internet access is yes, the amount of bandwidth that “free Internet” makes available often falls short of what attendees and confer- ence organizers need and expect. “Free Internet may be acceptable if all you are going to do is grab email,” Owen said, “but it may not be appropriate for anything else.” A more useful way to frame the con-
versation is around high-speed Internet access, he said, and what amounts are required to allow organizers to deliver digital meeting content and also meet the needs of attendees, many of whom bring two or three mobile devices with
28 PCMA CONVENE APRIL 2013
pickup, they also need to audit attendee Internet usage. Owen said: “You have to understand what your usage is and know your event history.”
. —Barbara Palmer
Watch a video conversation about high- speed Internet access between Michael Owen and Matthew Harvey, vice presi- dent for client network services at PSAV Presentation Services, at
convn.org/ high-speed-internet. The video is part of The Intersection Series: Where Tech- nology Meets Inspiration, at
pcma.org/ theintersection, presented by PCMA in partnership with PSAV.
For more information about understanding bandwidth, including tips from Matthew Harvey, see the Working Smarter story
“Banding Together,” from the January 2013 issue of Convene, at
convn.org/ how-much-bandwidth.
Round and Round In “Production 360,” another
Intersection Series video, Jess Stephens — PSAV’s executive director of creative services — discusses the idea of “strategy that’s supported by a theme” and meeting design that’s “instrumental from the beginning to the end, and all the way back around again.” “Planning is basically logistics,” Stephens says, “but the differentiator between planners is one that understands a message — understands that you don’t put something in a room that doesn’t resonate with the objective of what the meeting is trying to do.”
Watch the video:
convn.org/ production-360
Is There Free Wi-Fi?
PCMA.ORG
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