For the first time in five years , professional meeting planners are generally optimistic that the industry is once again healthy , and that although it might never return to the free-spending days before the recession, the dark clouds that once loomed over it are gone. But just as the overall 2014 meetings industry outlook is positive, there are serious concerns, too, most of them related to rising costs that must be reconciled against budgets that are not growing.
Kati Quigley, CMP, senior director of worldwide partner community marketing at Microsoft in Redmond, WA, is optimistic that 2014 will be another year of recovery and growth for the meeting industry. “I think there is generally a very positive outlook overall,” says Quigley, who plans Microsoft’s major user conferences and customer events. “I’m hearing more optimism, not just from planners, but also from supplier partners.”
Gia Staley, CMP, manager, meetings and events, at Fort Worth, TX-based Smith & Nephew (Biotherapeutics), which holds about 50 meetings a year, shares Quigley’s optimism. “From a corporate standpoint, we’re as busy, if not busier, than we were last year,” Staley says. “We’re growing, and we have new products that we’re launching. And our field sales group is expanding. As a result of that, we’re having more meetings. And that includes more training meetings. We invest heavily in our salesforce, which has increased by 50 percent.”