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Sue Pelletier MeetingsNet Web editor, mad blogger, and editor of Association Meetings magazine...more

Archive for March, 2006

Atlanta to sue Internet sites

First it was Los Angeles, then Bellingham, Wash., and San Diego. Now the move to stop Internet travel sites from charging customers for taxes the city never sees is moving to Atlanta. From The Atlantic Journal-Constitution:

    According to the suit, the companies buy blocks of rooms at a cost lower than what they charge customers, who book services on their sites. The suit said the sites charge customers a 7 percent tax based on a higher room rate but only pass along to the city the tax that would apply to the lower room rates they get by buying rooms in bulk.

I haven’t heard much from the other side of the story yet, but I’m sure it’s coming.

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Related Topics: Hospitality news |

Friday fun: Get to the executive suite

Meeting planners often talk about how they want to be more strategic and get a place at the table with the top execs. This may not be the way to do it, but it’s a lot of fun. C’mon, it’s Friday—let’s play some Office Invaders.

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Related Topics: Just for fun |

The 13 best travel sites

According to Forbes.com, they are (drumroll, please):

BreezeNet.com, for rental car info
Concierge.com, for info from Conde Nast Traveler
FlyerTalk.com, for everything airline-related
GridSkipper.com, for the inside dirt on cities
HotelChatter.com, for the inside dirt on hotels
igougo.com, for trip inspiration and what to do in various places
Kayak.com, for online booking of hotel, airfare, etc.
, a compendium of ways to search travel blogs
Priceline.com, for online booking, especially for hotels
SeatGuru.com, for the lowdown on airline seating on all types of planes
Site59.com, for last-minute bookings
TravelZoo.com, with great deals for flexible travelers
VijayDandapani.com, an inside the hospitality industry blog by an industry insider

I’m glad a lot of my favorites made the Forbes list! I’ll have to check out that last one—that’s a new one to me.

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Related Topics: Travel, Technology |

A novel way to track meeting spend

OK, you really can’t use it for tracking meeting spend (sorry!). But when my dad sent me a link to WheresGeorge.com, I had to check it out. The site lets you enter the serial number of any bill in your wallet, and in theory anyway, you’ll be able to see where it came from and where it goes after it leaves your hands. I think it might need a much wider adoption, seeing as there are who-knows-how-many U.S. bills in circulation—the pitiful few I had on hand to test it out didn’t have a history yet.

But what a cool concept.

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Related Topics: Just for fun |

Who owns history?

When it comes to convention center slogans, Boston won when it got Philadelphia to drop its “Where Conventions Make History” slogan (Philly went with “Where Bigger Meets Better” instead). Boston officials said the former slogan was too similar to its “Boston. Making Convention History.” I love this quote from a Boston official:

    “I guess the rivalry continues,” [MCCA executive director James E. Rooney] said. “They got Ben Franklin from us; we beat them in the Super Bowl; and now we get our slogan back. I am thinking of putting a huge bell in the front lobby.”

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Related Topics: Destinations |

Passport requirements could hurt Canadian attendance at U.S. meetings

If the new U.S. requirement that everyone entering the U.S. via sea or air show a passport goes into effect as scheduled on Dec. 31 of this year, you may be saying bye to some of your Canadian attendees. And it could hurt the Canadian meetings market, too. From Travel Wire News:

    In the Hotel Association of Canada/Fleishman Hillard survey, 37 percent of Canadians say they would take at least one trip to the US this year, with the majority (24 percent) indicating at least a one-night stay. However, when asked if they would still travel to the U.S. if a passport requirement were in place, 27 percent said they would likely cancel the trip.

    America is Canada’s largest inbound market. Almost 75 percent of Canadian business comes from the US. If a huge percentage of Americans needs to cross the border but will cancel travel due to the passport issue, Canada’s meetings and conventions business will suffer tremendously. The Conference Board of Canada reports that the loss will be about $1.7 billion over 3 years. (Currently, only about 20 percent of Americans has passports). Conversely, American hotels, conventions and meetings loss is estimated at $785 million once the requirement is in place.

Some good ink about conventions in small cities

Two articles about conventions in smaller cities from today’s news:

Sacramento’s Convention Business Picking Up

    High hotel rates in cities like Los Angeles and San Francisco are driving many planners to select smaller cities like Sacramento for meetings and conventions, officials said.

    Sacramento is among the top five smaller cities seeing the biggest growth in inquiries from groups looking to hold meetings.

    “It absolutely is a cost savings to come here,” said Tina McCarty of the Sacramento Convention Center

Small cities welcome big conventions: Northern Colorado tourism leaders hope region takes advantage of trend. A snip:

    Exorbitant hotel room rates in places such as New York and Washington are a good thing for Northern Colorado, said Jim Clark, chief executive officer of the Fort Collins Convention & Visitors Bureau. Clark said he expected the trend of conferences moving to smaller cities.

    “We’re hoping that wave catches up with us soon here,” Clark said.

As someone who used to work in Fort Collins, I’d give it a big two thumbs up for small conferences. There may not be much downhill skiing, but the mountains are gorgeous, access to Estes Park easy (in the summer), and the people are great. And the room rates are a lot cheaper than some other mountain destinations.

As the sellers market continues to drag prices upward for the big-city destinations, I bet we’ll see more of the second- and third-tier trend for conferences and conventions small enough to fit into them.

Update: I forgot I had this one from USAToday sitting in my in-box: Smaller cities roll out red carpet for big conventions.

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Related Topics: Destinations |

If airlines sold paint

I’ve seen this one before, but in case you haven’t, check it out: If Airlines Sold Paint. It’d be funnier if it wasn’t so true…

(Thanks to my favorite Sabre Geek for the pointer.)

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Related Topics: Just for fun, Travel |

Mentoring program for meeting planners

Sandy Biback, CMP CMM, Imagination+ Meeting Planners Inc., who everyone on the industry listservs probably has at least a passing acquaintance with, has teamed up with Sharon Worsley, Live with Intent, and Gale Gingrich, CAAP CMP, The Gingrich Group Inc., to provide a meetings and events industry mentoring program called, “Mentoring: 24 Hours & Beyond.” From the press release, it sounds interesting: The sessions are limited to just five people, held at a retreat, and they include “visioning, resume review, and personal coaching post 24 hours, as well as a 6 month followup.”

If you’re interested, e-mail Gale (her phone is 416-690-9629) or Sandy (416-694-7121) to find out the whens and wheres.

Best and worst WiFi hotels

From the ever-vigilant HotelChatter, here are the best and worst hotels when it comes to WiFi.

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Related Topics: Hospitality news |

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