Michelle Bruno
Michelle Bruno is a writer, blogger, and technology journalist. She publishes Event Tech Brief (eventtechbrief.com), a weekly newsletter and website on event technology. You can reach her at michelle@brunogroup.com.
Selecting event technology can be a daunting task. If you’re an event planner, there is so much to choose from and so little time. Features, functions, and data outputs are certainly key factors in making a decision, but those come later in the purchase process. To get the right technology, planners should first start with identifying meeting objectives and take it from there.
Identify Macro Objectives
Every meeting has a goal. Corporate meetings could drive more sales, increase customer loyalty, or educate employees. Association meetings may want to educate members, earn revenue, increase membership, or help supplier members get more leads and sales. A for-profit trade show and conference might endeavor to educate attendees, make a profit, grow the show, and enhance the attendee experience. Planners should start the technology selection process by first answering the question, “why are we having this meeting?”
Develop A Roadmap
Identifying the purpose of the meeting is only the beginning. Once the macro objectives are clear, planners have to drill down and identify the specific steps they’ll have to take to meet those goals. For example, if the macro objective of a corporate meeting is to “drive more sales,” the event team might take the following steps to meet that objective through the meeting:
Example: Analyze Existing Solutions
It can be difficult for planners to find the event technology they need if they don’t already know what they have. By creating technology stacks—visualizations of the tools, apps, and platforms they currently use—they can begin matching the roadmap (above) with the specific solutions they’re already using to see what they’re missing. An analysis for a corporate meeting looking to drive more sales could look like this:
Make Informed Technology Decisions
In the example above, the corporate meeting planner looking to drive more sales with her meeting learned some very valuable information: her firm needs a solution that connects sales reps with customers and prospects (a networking app, perhaps?), and it already uses beacons to accomplish tasks in three different roadmap categories. She can consider using her existing beacon platform for networking or start a search for an entirely new networking solution.
By identifying macro objectives, creating a roadmap for accomplishing those objectives, and mapping existing solutions, planners can make better, more informed technology decisions.
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