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Page 1: Jmic paris conf may 2015 pres leo jago

The Business Event Value Measurement Paradox:

‘You can’t manage what you can’t measure’

But

‘Not everything that counts can be counted’The Value of Meetings

JMIC Workshop 14 May 2015

Professor Leo Jago

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Presentation Overview

• Tourism Value of Business Events

• Beyond Tourism Value

• Studies to Assess Value

• Ways Forward

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Importance of Business Events

• Growing recognition of the BE contribution to host destinations

• Focus since the turn of the century on their national economic contribution

• UNWTO published a methodology:– Measuring the Economic Importance of

the Meetings Industry: Developing a Tourism Satellite Account Extension

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National Economic Contribution Studies

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Tourism-only Value

• Agreement that the tourism value of BE is large

• Reasons why tourism has been the focus:– There is a universally accepted approach to

measuring this contribution;– The contribution can be assessed almost

immediately after the event has taken place;– Many of the key stakeholders promoting BE are

aligned with the tourism sector – Focused on destination

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Historic Assessment of BE Value

Overnight Expenditure & Daytrips > 50

KM

Day Trips < 50 KM

Organiser & Exhibitor Expenditure

Not strictly part of tourism

Host Destination Focused

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Reasons for Staging a BE

Core Motives or Needs

· Develop and share ideas·Educate/inform·Promote·Network / socialise·Change attitudes / behaviour·Sales and performance

Core Motives or Needs

· Develop and share ideas·Educate/inform·Promote·Network / socialise·Change attitudes / behaviour·Sales and performance

Business

EventBusiness

Event

Key Outcomes

· Knowledge creation / innovation· Knowledge dissemination·Improved organisation performance·Personal development·Increased productivity·Increased sales·New skills and knowledge·Awareness·Investment in destination·Business development in destination·Enhanced destination profile/image

Key Outcomes

· Knowledge creation / innovation· Knowledge dissemination·Improved organisation performance·Personal development·Increased productivity·Increased sales·New skills and knowledge·Awareness·Investment in destination·Business development in destination·Enhanced destination profile/image

Tourism Impacts

•Direct spend

•Job creation

•Infrastructure investment

Tourism Impacts

•Direct spend

•Job creation

•Infrastructure investmentTourism is a by-product not a

key outcome

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Beyond Tourism Value of BE• Growing recognition of the

‘beyond tourism’ contribution of BE– Delivering Innovation,

Knowledge & Performance: The Role of BE (2010)

– MCB study in 2010– BES study in 2011– JMIC Workshop in 2011– Future Convention Cities

Initiative in 2014

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The BE Value Triangle

Overnight Expenditure & Daytrips > 50

KM

Day Trips < 50 KM

Organiser & Exhibitor Expenditure

ROI for Delegates & Employers

Other Delegate and Destination Benefits (Knowledge Creation & Dissemination, Investment)

Event Focused

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Return on Investment (ROI)• Long-standing technique that has been adapted to

BE

• Can assess the value of the event overall to the organiser or to delegates or to employers

• Prompts respondents to think about what they want from the event beforehand

• Worth doing on a regular basis to ensure that event is delivering on objectives

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Melbourne Convention Bureau (MCB) Study

• Aim was to track the ‘beyond tourism’ benefits of 4 events for 2 years after the event

• Involved delegates, exhibitors, sponsors and organisers at each event

• Online surveys of participants and in-depth interviews were conducted each 6 months for 2 years

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Key MCB Findings

> 50% of respondents from each of the four BE said the event benefits were:– Developed new business relationships (>54%)– Increased profile of expertise (>69%)– Personal profile was enhanced (>63%)– Obtained important knowledge (>50%)– Built relationships (>82%)

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Key MCB Findings

> 50% of respondents from three of the four BE said the event benefits were:– Received EOIs from from potential customers– Increased market intelligence– Experienced innovation or improved business

practices

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Key MCB Learnings

• Wide range of beyond tourism benefits experienced by most participants

• Many of the benefits take time to be realised

• Ability to attribute benefits to the event greatly diminishes over time

• Very difficult to quantify the benefits

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Business Events Sydney (BES) Study

• Surveyed at five international congresses

• Collected 1090 online responses from delegates, sponsors, exhibitors & organisers

• This study was subsequently replicated in Seoul, Durban and Toronto in FCCI study

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Key BES Findings

Benefits for the host destination– Enhanced Sydney’s reputation as a global business

events destination (87%)– Exposed local delegates in the conference

destination to cutting edge research and world’s best practice (82%)

– Showcased local talent from the conference destination (75%)

– Enhanced the capacity of the academic sector in the conference destination (68%)

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Key BES FindingsBenefits for the delegates– Congresses facilitated the dissemination of

new knowledge, ideas, techniques, materials and technologies (90%)

– Shared information with colleagues and peers (97%)

– Provided new professional insights (87%)– Shared information with students (64%)– Contributed to building the knowledge and

capabilities of young people (85%)

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Key BES FindingsBenefits for exhibitors and sponsors– Gained product exposure/ awareness (90%)– Obtained leads for future business (90%)– Improved brand awareness (78%)– Contributed to developing the sector (73%)– Increased domestic sales (56%)– Increased export sales (49%)

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Key Overall Learnings

• Overwhelming evidence that business events make a substantial ‘beyond tourism’ contribution

• Much of the ‘beyond tourism’ contribution leaves the host region

• It is extremely difficult to quantify this broader contribution (time, attribution)

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Conclusions 1

• Whilst ‘measuring helps managing’, there are some things that are problematic to measure

• Valuable resources will be wasted in continuing to seek the ‘magic measure’

• Accept that some things that ‘count can’t be counted’

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Conclusions 2

• Identify case study examples for host destinations

• Identify the drivers of the key ‘beyond tourism’ benefits

• Devise strategies to leverage these benefits

• Seek to measure the value of the leveraging activities

• Clarify focus of benefit – event or host destination?

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Key ‘Beyond Tourism’ Benefits

General• Formed / enhanced

relationships• Built personal /

company profile• Formed sales leads /

made sales• Disseminated

knowledge• Created knowledge

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Key ‘Beyond Tourism’ Benefits

Destination Specific• Enhanced image / reputation• Showcase local talent

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Summary of Key Beyond Tourism Benefits

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Measuring these Benefits• The non-destination benefits can be measured

via ROI– However, some benefits take time to be realised

• Some of the destination benefit can be measured via ROI

• Difficult to identify some of the destination beneficiaries– Hence, hard to capture the benefits

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Benefits Measured by ROIROI can be used to measure the dimensions shaded in yellow

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Issues• ROI requires effort to administer– Enhanced with a pre-event survey

• More effort required to identify the range of local beneficiaries outside the event

• Need to be clear about the focus of the benefits– Delegates– Event overall– Host destination

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Suggested Way Forward

• Accept that not everything that counts can be counted

• Undertake some ROI studies of sample events in each jurisdiction

• Collect exemplar case studies of the benefits to host destinations

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Suggested Way Forward

• Identify the drivers of the key ‘beyond tourism’ outcomes, for example– Sales & sales leads– Personal & professional profiles– Knowledge dissemination– Enhanced destination profile

• Develop strategies to enhance the contributions made by these drivers