June 15, 2022 by Dave Lutz
In my experience, most large conferences this year are realizing about 80 percent of their 2019 revenue performance. For some of the major annual meetings we’re tracking, sponsorship revenue has been a bright spot when compared to exhibit revenue performance.
The textbook outcome of a successful sponsorship is improved attitudes and behavior for that brand. But that’s about affecting emotions — difficult, if not impossible — to measure. In other words, a sponsor’s ROI is subjective in nature, making pricing an inexact science.
Pricing methodologies for sponsorship vary greatly. If you’re being charged with updating and optimizing the pricing and effectiveness around your conference’s sponsorships, use these five tips to guide you:
For a sponsorship program to be successful, you can never sell your attendees out. If it’s not something that they appreciate, you need improved inventory. Giving sponsors more stage time, for example, could backfire. It may bring in greater revenue but result in a poorer attendee experience — adversely changing their behaviors and attitudes toward a brand.
Which of these strategies are you currently using for sponsorship pricing? How involved is your leadership with the budget maker?
Adapted from Dave’s Forward Thinking column in PCMA’s Convene. Reprinted with permission of Convene, the magazine of the Professional Convention Management Association. ©2022.
Filed Under: Business Model, Sponsorship & Exhibits
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