0 Comment(s) 08/08/2008 +0100 GMT
by Martin Sirk
I'm just back from a record-breaking Destination Marketing
Associations International (DMAI) convention, which attracted over
1,300 to Las Vegas and am about to set off for MPI's sure-to-be
record-breaking WEC (more than 4,000 anticipated!) in the same city
The
global financial crisis certainly isn't keeping meetings professionals
tied behind their desks. The big theme at DMAI was how to make
destination marketing organisations as relevant as possible for their
communities – there's a palpable worry that as the economy continues to
struggle the role of destination marketing professionals and their
economic potential are somehow being ignored or undervalued by key
stakeholders amongst politicians and business communities.
MPI
is certain to pick up the same theme with regard to meetings
professionals – how can we ensure our skills and economic impact are
adequately recognised and translated into real gains for our profession.
DMAI
and MPI are both keen to ensure that their members elevate their own
perceptions of what it means to be in the meetings business. We
shouldn't be in the business of selling commodity products like hotel
rooms and meeting space, or simply handling the logistics side of
organising events, but should strive to be valued partners who are
intimately involved in achieving the objectives of the event we're
hosting or planning. I'm sure that's the key reason why MPI is making
such ambitious attempts to change the way its own meetings are
structured and run.
The hunt for relevance reminds me of some
advocacy themes we've been stressing recently in ICCA: the powerful
impact of international association conventions on issues such as
knowledge transfer to developing countries, accreditation and advanced
education, scientific and medical advancement, economic development,
finding new solutions to global social and environmental challenges,
better cross-cultural understanding.
I believe our industry
needs to promote these wider issues and not simply focus on the direct
economic expenditure of delegates, significant though this is in
itself. I'm sure that DMAI and MPI are going to pick up on these themes
as well, and that the major industry associations are going to work
even closer together in the coming years to promote how relevant we
really are.
Martin Sirk is the chief executive of ICCA






































