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Meeting of minds will cut costs

Meet­ings can cost an organ­i­sa­tion mil­lions of pounds. While the way com­pa­nies book air trav­el or accom­mo­da­tion has been scru­ti­nised close­ly to cap spend­ing, mon­i­tor­ing out­go­ings on actu­al meet­ings is tak­ing a lit­tle longer.

“Three or four years ago, most of the com­pa­nies we worked with would admit that they did not know what their meet­ings spend was and could eas­i­ly be 50 per cent out when putting a fig­ure against it,” says Des McLaugh­lin, man­ag­ing direc­tor at meet­ings agency Grass Roots HBI.

Fay Sharpe, man­ag­ing direc­tor of venue find­ing and events com­pa­ny Zibrant, agrees. “Meet­ings spend is a mav­er­ick area and not eas­i­ly con­trolled because there are so many peo­ple in a busi­ness who plan meet­ings, so bud­gets are held in dif­fer­ent pock­ets around a com­pa­ny,” she says.

Strate­gic Meet­ings Man­age­ment (SMM) first emerged about a decade ago. Put sim­ply, it is about hav­ing an organ­ised and struc­tured way of book­ing meet­ings. It was pio­neered by com­pa­nies with large sales forces and mul­ti­ple prod­uct lines, often those from the phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal and tech­nol­o­gy indus­tries, which neces­si­tat­ed more fre­quent or large-scale meet­ings.

Com­pli­ance to reg­u­la­to­ry laws and guide­lines, par­tic­u­lar­ly for the phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal indus­try, led to demand for more auditable meet­ing process­es. And SMM has picked up momen­tum in the wake of the reces­sion, as the dri­ving force behind its imple­men­ta­tion is often the need to cut costs. Pro­cure­ment depart­ments are increas­ing­ly more involved in the process of con­trol­ling meet­ings expen­di­ture.

“The main rea­son a com­pa­ny devel­ops an SMM pro­gramme is to cre­ate sav­ings,” says Mr McLaugh­lin. “If a com­pa­ny is spend­ing in excess of £2 mil­lion on meet­ings, for exam­ple, then it should be look­ing to save 30 per cent by putting an SMM plan in place.”

SMM pro­grammes require a com­pa­ny to col­lect data on meet­ings and events spend­ing by reg­is­ter­ing it through a cen­tralised sys­tem or indi­vid­ual. Instant reduc­tions in costs can be made by con­sol­i­dat­ing sup­pli­ers, while a pre­ferred venues list can mean that a com­pa­ny is less like­ly to be exposed to finan­cial risk because it is able to nego­ti­ate vol­ume dis­counts and more favourable con­tract terms.

Put sim­ply, it is about hav­ing an organ­ised and struc­tured way of book­ing meet­ings

Fol­low­ing an SMM pol­i­cy also allows com­pa­nies to com­mu­ni­cate guide­lines employ­ees must fol­low in terms of brand image. Zibrant’s Ms Sharpe says that this is of par­tic­u­lar con­cern for com­pa­nies in the finan­cial sec­tor at present. She adds that in sec­tors, such as oil and gas, health and safe­ty is anoth­er rea­son for devel­op­ing an SMM pro­gramme as it means com­pa­nies can mon­i­tor where employ­ees are trav­el­ling.

SMM is not with­out its chal­lenges. One issue can be around com­pli­ance, with some employ­ees who are charged with plan­ning meet­ings reluc­tant to work with cen­tralised book­ing process­es. Ms Sharpe also says there has to be a con­sid­er­a­tion for the cul­ture of an organ­i­sa­tion and rec­om­mends that those tasked with stream­lin­ing a glob­al business’s meet­ings spend­ing start on home turf to be able to demon­strate the imme­di­ate ben­e­fits.

For com­pa­nies that hold one-off cre­ative events, such as car com­pa­nies stag­ing prod­uct launch­es, then work­ing with pre­ferred venues and sup­pli­ers might not be appro­pri­ate. But the frame­work of an SMM pro­gramme still ensures com­pa­nies are con­sid­er­ing the rea­sons for stag­ing events more care­ful­ly.

“Cen­tral to SMM is know­ing what dri­ves the busi­ness. With­out this approach, most peo­ple do not spend the time try­ing to under­stand what it is they want to achieve. SMM starts by ask­ing the why, rather than the how,” says James Wilkins, man­ag­ing direc­tor at com­mu­ni­ca­tions agency Logis­tik, which organ­is­es events for clients includ­ing Marks & Spencer, Lloyds Bank­ing Group and the Post Office.

The term SMM is often used inap­pro­pri­ate­ly to refer to the strate­gic deliv­ery of meet­ings and events, rather than the com­pa­ny-wide process­es and stan­dards that mit­i­gate risk and result in cost-sav­ings. And, although SMM will result in more care­ful con­sid­er­a­tion of what the com­pa­ny wants the out­come of a meet­ing to be, mea­sure­ments relat­ing to SMM poli­cies will be linked to the deliv­ery of the event, not the impact of the meet­ing.

Pro­vid­ing you have com­mit­ment from senior man­age­ment and end-users, SMM should give a very good idea of w hat a com­pa­ny is spend­ing and sav­ing. “Com­pa­nies that have an SMM pol­i­cy in place will know exact­ly what they are spend­ing on the hotel or venue, which accounts for about 60 per cent of the meet­ing cost,” says Mr McLaugh­lin. “What they might not know is the exact spend on aux­il­iary ser­vices, such as flow­ers, speak­ers or AV . That’s the next step for SMM.”