Exhibition News November 2019 | Page 60

Roundtable Carlo Zoccali, head of sales at Farnborough International. “This was an important event which helped to quantify the value of relationships and understand the transition to partnerships. Through this Roundtable, we focused on how host venues can do so much more than simply accommodate events; it’s about collaborating and sharing values in a way that goes beyond the transactional. There was tremendous honestly around the table which contributed to a meaningful discussion. Everyone felt comfortable discussing what can be tough and shared experiences led to reassurance as well as some new ideas and solutions, particularly around potential advertising models. “What’s great about the Roundtable is that it is already impacting how we do business. . 60 — November and get exhibitors in months before the event so they could understand what was going to happen onsite to help them with their planning and how they could maximise their operation. These events, which were pioneering at that time but now fairly common practice, were primarily organised by the operations team but everyone was encouraged to attend. That’s when the exhibitors became highly creative and that comes from being more transparent and sharing knowledge.” Murray Ellis, show director on Commercial Vehicle Show adds: “Venues should be holding these days, and explain how their venue operates. Exhibitors are anxious about going to a venue, and it makes perfect sense to explain how they get the best out of it. Why is it only up to the organiser? Surely the venue has a major part to play in all of this?” Sam North, founder of Infection Point, who advises individuals on leadership and marketing adds: “Collaboration on customer service needs to drastically improve. Bouncing exhibitors from supplier to supplier, with new data entry and price discovery at every point is a terrible experience. Amazon would laugh us out of the door if we told them how we treat our customers.” Technology Everyone at the table agrees that technology, or the lack of one common platform, is creating headaches between exhibitor, venue and organiser. Sigler explains: “We tried to integrate the manual to create one point of contract, but them we realised that there were six different systems we had to integrate this into and each of them needed passwords, we were lost as we wrote the thing.” Seaman believes there is a way to use technology, he adds: “The technology is there but we need some technological solution because our exhibitors are contacted 25 times in the lead up to the show by different people and it would be so much easier if this was done in one communication. They should be able to replicate what they do in London or Birmingham and apart from forms they have to complete like health and safety, it is up to organiser and venue to make this simpler. Zoccali adds: “The big challenge is that organisers use different suppliers. And then you’ve got to change that system year on year. We’re just rolling out a new system for Farnborough Air Show this year, we have a project management company helping us to do that with an exhibitor portal, but we haven’t found a way to talk to different suppliers like power because it’s so specific. You’d think in this day and age, where you can go onto sites to buy a holiday and it’ll connect to suppliers and give 15 different holiday companies, but we can’t get it to connect to ours because everyone uses a different front and back end.” O’Connor explains that a tougher approach is what the industry needs: “What really needs to happen, and I have spoken to the AEO about it, is to create a set of standards that the industry and suppliers all adhere to make integration seamless. It’s a very complex model, they’re not up and running but the theory is there, and we couldn’t get it across to organisers or backers because it will cost a lot of money. It has to come from someone like the AEO or UFI globally.” EN