Benchmark, a global hospitality company, has compiled 5 trends transforming meetings in the year ahead.
“We’ve seen this coming, but in Millennials have become the dominant force in meetings,” said Ted Davis, Benchmark’s chief sales and marketing officer, about the first of the 5 trends transforming meetings in 2020.. “Our sales and conference services teams interact closely with millennials, responsive to their needs for everything from building personal time into meetings to accommodating a myriad of out-of-the-ordinary dining requests to creating curated destination experiences customized to the individual interests of the millennial, all of which needs to be considered when planning, preparing for and executing meetings today. This is having a transformative influence on how we approach the group meeting experience in 2020 and beyond.”
Millennials Have Moved into Meetings Mainstream
Millennials have moved into the meetings mainstream and have now become a dominant force, the first meeting trend Benchmark identifies. Conference attendees in 2020 increasingly average in age from 30 to 45 years. It is a generation that is so tech-savvy that this is inherently reflected in their expectations when meeting for business and pleasure. With millennials comes an accompanying demand for highly advanced and sophisticated technology, significantly increased dietary requirements, personal enrichment experiences curated to individual interests, privacy concerns going well beyond technology, and toward individual wellness during the meeting with planners building in private, personal time for attendees.
Sustainable Food & Beverage 2.0
Creative, sustainable, and plant-based cuisine is expected in 2020. What meeting attendees put into their bodies impacts attentiveness and productivity, so healthful refreshment breaks are a high priority too. Increasingly planners want to know where a property’s food ingredients are sourced, and this includes the bar for such items as organically produced liquors, how food and beverage selections are prepared, and that an executive chef can easily accommodate a growing number of diet requests that are no longer considered special.
Demand Holds Firm
Meeting demand is holding firm this year, despite economic, political, and business concerns. Planners are slower to commit, perhaps waiting to see what else is coming down the pike. That said, pricing has not taken a hit as of yet, and is, for the most part, on the increase with planners actively seeing the value of meeting packaging, which is experiencing strong demand. Meetings remain, on average, three days, and average group size is actually on the increase. And pharma, education, and technology are the top three industries hosting meetings in 2020.
Giving Back While Coming Together
Teambuilding is the most popular inclusion in meetings this year, and initiatives that involve community and charitable activities for social impact are what planners are looking for in 2020. Giving back enhances personal and group mindfulness and empathy, which helps develop a productive team, and this is on the meeting agenda this year, as is the strong desire is for group experiences that inspire productive and positive change and leadership development. This is especially the case in the tech industry.
Get Out and Explore
Wanderlust and the desire to explore and discover is a flourishing element of meeting agendas in 2020. Moving off property and experiencing local color, or if in an urban location historic and cultural sites, cutting-edge restaurants or micro-distilleries is an essential request of planners for their groups this year, even if for an evening. Planners and properties are curating these experiences for individual and group enrichment. Everyone returns to the meeting refreshed and having learned/experienced something unique in the destination in which they have come together for their meeting.