In-person events are still widely considered the most effective business-to-business (B2B) tactic (69% of marketers agree), but 60% also place video in the top five tactics.
We just finished up our first event utilizing 4K projection technology this past week in DC.
Neumann University is celebrating their 50th year and decided for the first time to have their annual Gala on the grounds of the University in The Mirenda Center, their gymnasium.
Here are five trends altering the meetings landscape in 2015…
Choosing a unique space or a beautiful hotel is only the starting point to hosting an amazing meeting or event. Time after time, planners are promised the world when selecting a venue only to find out that the seating capacity is based on wall to wall occupancy and does not consider food stations, charging stations for phones, tablets or computers, décor, entertainment or audio visual needs.
The end of 2014 and beginning of 2015 have brought us many predictions about the top trends to watch this year, and we have been particularly interested in the technology trends. Here are a few of the tech trends we are keeping an eye on.
Kodak invented the first digital camera in 1975, but at its height Kodak also controlled 90% of the market for film in the US. So instead of pushing this new technology, Kodak held back and focused on their primary revenue source. Fast forward to today when everyone has a camera on their phone, and depending on your demographic, perhaps you have a stand-alone digital camera.
C-Suite Network required a tech-savvy production partner to assist them in planning and executing a world-class series of conferences for over 350 people with the added challenge of recently losing a key Planning Team Member.
Over 4,100 attendees met in Boston, MA at the John B. Hynes Veterans Memorial Convention Center from July 6-11, 2014 for the 7th World Congress of Biomechanics. This would mark the first time the Congress was held in the United States in over two decades and was the largest biomechanics conference to ever be held in the US. Participants from 58 countries converged to discuss the latest advances in biomechanics measurement, modeling, and medical devices.