Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Conference­s plot a comeback even before vaccines are widely distribute­d

- By Sarah McBride

It could take a while before the handshake comes back, if it ever does. Business conference­s, however, are set to restart in the U.S. the moment health codes allow.

And despite uncertaint­y around when exactly that will be, convention organizers are holding out hope — and event space — for a possible return in the coming weeks.

One of those optimists is Peter Diamandis. He convened some of his employees at their office in Culver City, California, last Wednesday for a low-key, inperson holiday gathering. There, Diamandis said his flagship annual conference, Abundance 360, was still on for late January in Malibu, Calif., according to a person familiar with the situation who asked not to be identified. It will feature seminars on technology and entreprene­urialism, as well as a video address from Salesforce.com’s Marc Benioff.

Mr. Diamandis said last week the company was taking precaution­s to hold the event safely. Anyone attending in person would have to take a nose-swab test 72 hours before arrival and each day during the conference itself. He was closely tracking infection rates and regulatory guidance, he said.

“Many of our members definitely want to get together in person (if possible),” he wrote in an email to Bloomberg.

One day later, though, Mr. Diamandis changed his mind. The company canceled the in- person program for most people scheduled to attend Abundance 360, according to a message to staff reviewed by Bloomberg. The summit will be limited to about 16 people who paid $30,000 for special events and coaching, internal documents show. (Although that, too, could be canceled depending on the health situation, Mr. Diamandis wrote in an email to Bloomberg.) Everyone else will have access to online programs.

Of the many important things lost this year, conference­s are pretty far down the list. But for the organizati­ons that put on the events, the coronaviru­s pandemic has severely altered their operations. Cancellati­ons in the U.S. this year will cost as much as $22 billion, according to estimates from the Center for Exhibition Industry Research, a trade group.

Most conference­s are sticking to online- only through early next year, including CES, the largest technology industry conference typically held in January, or are postponing until the second half of the year, said Heather Keenan, president of Key Events, a meeting and events-planning firm. Some are exploring hybrid events with the choice of online or in person starting in May, she said.

There are exceptions.

A surf expo is scheduled to start Jan. 6 in Orlando. A cheerleadi­ng competitio­n in Los Angeles is set to begin Jan. 30. The Conservati­ve Political Action Conference moved to the Hyatt Regency Orlando from Washington and is slated for late February. The World Economic Forum, a favorite of world leaders, was reschedule­d to May from January and relocated to Singapore from Davos, Switzerlan­d. Last week, Marriott-Internatio­nal Inc. said it will offer on-site, pre-event COVID- 19 tests to help bring back its meeting business.

It’s tempting to imagine the end of the pandemic is just around the corner after several countries began distributi­ng vaccines this month. But the timeline for herd immunity is unknown and perhaps months away even in developed nations. In the U.S., U.K. and elsewhere, a new wave is cresting. The Los Angeles area has been hit particular­ly hard.

Event organizers are most concerned about legal and moral liability if they open too soon. “They are not willing to take the chance that their conference becomes a supersprea­der event,” said Key Events, which has worked with Google and Twitter Event planners are trying to game out when profession­als will start traveling and congregati­ng again.

“The hardest part is none of us know when that will happen and what it looks like when it does,” Ms. Keenan said. If it doesn’t happen soon , though, many events-based companies won’t survive.

 ?? David Williams/Bloomberg ?? Attendees arrive at CES, the Consumer Technology Associatio­n’s annual trade show, in January 2019 in Las Vegas.
David Williams/Bloomberg Attendees arrive at CES, the Consumer Technology Associatio­n’s annual trade show, in January 2019 in Las Vegas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States