0 Comment(s) 30/05/2008 +0100 GMT
by Matt Storey
It won’t come as startling news to many that event planners are
currently showing a tendency towards late booking. Short lead times
have been the bane of this industry’s existence for years, but even so,
there’s been a marked increase in last-minute decision-making and this
trend is exercising the minds of those of us at the very sharp end of
event delivery.
This may well be a reaction to the creeping
unease about the state of the economy, although my own company hasn’t
yet recorded any drop in confirmed business. So, at the moment, we are
looking at a holding of breath rather than a tightening of belts. But
if planners are concerned about spending, there’s a certain irony in
their sitting on purchase orders until the very last-minute.
Smart planning
Agencies
and suppliers alike will deliver the best events if they are able to
allocate the right people and resources to each project – whether it’s
a question of production kit, freelance staff or even the requisite
number of screws. The late booking trend makes forward planning of such
resources a lot more difficult.
The events industry relies on
the ability to source the best people for each job, and I speak on
behalf of a company whose very product is manpower – the crews that
build event infrastructures – so, for us, this is a particularly
pressing concern.
Smart event planning early on is by far the
most economic strategy because it enables people and skills to be
deployed cost-effectively. Not surprisingly, planners may not be able
to get the venue they want, for the dates they want, at the price they
want, if they have left it too late.
From my own company’s
perspective, we can’t always put together the crew that we would
ideally want at short notice, and it may be necessary to double-up on
skills when all the experienced multi-taskers have been allocated
elsewhere. On occasion we have had to turn work away rather than send
out insufficiently experienced or inadequately supervised crew.
Proactive approach
But
the responsibility for smart planning doesn’t have to lie exclusively
with our clients. By taking some time to analyse booking patterns over
several years, it’s possible to predict those events that are likely to
be repeated and, in the case of annual events, plot them on a calendar.
Rather than sitting and waiting for the phone to ring, suppliers in
such situations can take the initiative and offer a gentle reminder to
clients well in advance, prompting them to start thinking about the
event sooner rather than later.
Clients may be initially
surprised at such a proactive approach, but chances are that they will
be impressed as well, and maybe even grateful for the nudge. It makes
sound business sense to seek ways of building good client-suppler
relationships and this is a prime opportunity for our industry to show
a professional face by getting closer to, and assisting with, our
clients’ planning processes.
And the other positive spin-off
of this approach is that it produces some good internal disciplines for
our own companies at the same time. More time spent analysing and
projecting business patterns means fewer last-minute panics and less
seat-of-the-pants reaction.
Matt Storey is an Eventia board director, and head of business development at Gallowglass







































