What Does AI Mean for the Events Industry?

November 20, 2024

Athan Siah

Athan Siah is a Manager at Stax, a global business consulting services firm, where he specializes in the Events Ecosystem. Alongside Carole Boletti, he is Co-Editor of Globex, a leading report on the global exhibition industry. Athan has recently led several commercial due diligence projects on global Top 20 exhibition organizers, including the take private of Hyve. 

There is no shortage of hype around AI with the recent CEO-related drama at OpenAI and various “prophecies of doom.” We know there will be big impacts on business, ranging from the reshaping of law firms to pressure on Google paid search—but what does it mean for business events?   

There are risks associated with event participants utilizing AI, as it may diminish their reliance on events. For example, AI can improve solution search and procurement for buyers while improving sales and marketing for sellers. Overall, there is a net positive for events with significant prizes for organizers who use a variety of AI tools. 

The prizes fall into two domains: The first is enhanced value proposition for participants, and the second involves advantages around process efficiency and consequent cost savings for event organizers.   

Improved Value Proposition – Increased personal relevance through personalized experiences  

The random meeting model and serendipity will remain integral to events, but successful organizers will excel in enhancing personal relevance through personalized experiences.   

Enhanced and targeted communication will bring new levels of personalization to event marketing. With micro-segmentation, organizers can send highly personalized emails to prospects, drawing insights from their company’s website and online activity.   

Using AI for matchmaking is not new, with players such as Grip founding their businesses on this technology. Other organizers, such as Hyve and Ascential offer 1-2-1 at the core of their events. However, the effectiveness of such approaches varies across different event formats, with attempts to retrofit one-to-one interactions into traditional trade shows yielding mixed results. 

AI in Events

Authenticity  

The growth of AI may bring an unexpected benefit for events, namely, heightened authenticity. It is becoming harder to distinguish what is real and what is not. Continuing this trend of “blurring,” we are seeing these artificial elements coming to audio and it is starting on video as well. In-person settings undeniably deliver this authenticity.   

Richer Engagement and Deeper Content  

Generating more targeted invitations to meetings and conference sessions should lead to more focused audiences and richer engagement. However, automation, coupled with personalization, results in a higher bar to get attention. Conferences and other content can also be improved using AI to support content generation and dissemination. With strong execution, attendee return on time will increase alongside sponsor and exhibitor ROI.  

Organizer Benefits – Customer understanding  

One of the pillars of Exhibitions 3.0 is customer centricity. Customer understanding allows teams to define an event brand’s North Star and build its strategy. AI can support this by bringing new ways to analyze participant data and enhance customer understanding by facilitating improved feedback and analysis. In addition to automating translation and sentiment analysis of survey results, sentiment can be monitored passively. 

Process Efficiency and Cost Saving  

The AI Index shows that the leading use case of AI, by far, is cost reduction (cited by 37% of respondents in its annual survey). Like many other businesses, event organizers can automate tasks across the back office as well as aspects of customer service. AI will not just help bots answer customer questions, it will route conversations to the right team, speed up teammate response times, create help center content and enable teams to understand trends in their conversations. 

Predicting participant likelihood to attend, buy or churn is already a compelling use case of analytics for organizers. We should look out for potential improvements to AI’s pattern spotting capability as well as other ways to optimize marketing spend. Sales functions can be enhanced with improved targeting, lead scoring and scripting.   

Conclusion  

As the events industry continues to evolve, AI emerges as a pivotal tool for enhancing participant experiences and benefiting organizers. Tech-forward and process-led organizers stand to gain the most from integrating AI solutions into their event strategies, ensuring continued relevance and success in an increasingly competitive landscape. 

Editor’s note: Carole Boletti, Associate Director at Stax, contributed to this article.

 

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MGM Resorts is committed to fostering an inclusive and diverse culture, not just among employees and guests but also within its supply chain. The company prioritizes procuring goods and services from businesses owned by minorities, women, veterans, people with disabilities, LGBTQ individuals and those facing economic disadvantages. This commitment is integral to MGM Resorts' global procurement strategy.    Through its voluntary supplier diversity program, MGM Resorts actively identifies and connects certified diverse-owned suppliers to opportunities within its supply chain. The company is on track to spend at least 15% of its biddable procurement with diverse-owned businesses by 2025, demonstrating that supplier diversity is not only a social responsibility but also a strategic business imperative.    Supplier diversity isn’t just the right thing to do – it’s good for business. A diverse supply chain allows access to a broader range of perspectives and experience, helping to drive innovation, entrepreneurship and resilience, while strengthening communities. At MGM Resorts, engaging diverse suppliers ensures best-in-class experiences for guests and clients. Supplier diversity ensures a more resilient supply chain while supporting economic development in the communities in which it operates.   The impact of MGM Resorts' supplier diversity initiatives is significant. In 2023, these efforts supported over 3,500 jobs across more than 30 states, contributed over $214 million in income for diverse-owned businesses and generated more than $62 million in tax revenue. The story extends beyond the numbers – it reflects the tangible benefits brought to small and diverse-owned businesses, fostering economic empowerment in their communities.    MGM Resorts also supports the development and business skills of diverse-owned businesses through investment, mentorship and education. Through the MGM Resorts Supplier Diversity Mentorship Program, the company identifies, mentors and develops diverse-owned businesses to fill its future pipeline, while providing businesses with tools and resources to empower and uplift. Since 2017, the program has successfully graduated 105 diverse-owned businesses and is on track to achieve its goal of 150 graduates by 2025.     MGM Resorts’ commitment to supplier diversity not only enhances its business operations but also plays a crucial role in uplifting communities and fostering economic development. This approach reinforces the idea that diversity is a powerful driver of innovation and resilience, benefiting both the company and the wider community.