WEC speakers on creativity, LinkedIn and contracts

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WEC speakers on creativity, LinkedIn and contracts

By Blair Potter | Jun 21, 2022

June 22 @ WEC

Contracting for Recovery: Safeguarding Your Business for the Next Normal, 9-10 a.m.

Creativity on a Compressed Timeline, 2:30-3:30 p.m.

Level Up Your LinkedIn Game, 2:30-3:30 p.m.

Today’s WEC education topics run the gamut. Here, we delve into creativity, LinkedIn and contracts with just a few of the expert speakers who will be imparting their knowledge.

CREATIVITY ON A COMPRESSED TIMELINE

Heather Munnell, director of client experience for VDA, will lead the session “Creativity on a Compressed Timeline” at WEC. We spoke with her about enhancing creativity and keeping your edge.

Can you tell us one simple way meeting profes­sionals can enhance their focus on creativity?

Timelines in a post-COVID landscape are com­pressed and being pushed. As an event profes­sional, you need to define the deliverables with your partners; establishing clear lines of com­munication is imperative. This may mean re­developing email communication strategies to work with your partners and colleagues so they can quickly visualize in a subject line “action, de­cide or inform.” This will help keep the creative process on task.

How can meeting adjust to compressed timelines without losing their creative edge?

Keep an “idea toolbox,” which could be an active idea Pinterest board, notes on your phone, inspi­rational images or continued conversations with your partners on activations/concepts. The next best thing is born out of ideating with your part­ners and compressed timelines: You need to move quickly. So, do not be afraid to be in touch with your partners to ideate on the next best concept even if you do not have management sign-off or a venue confirmed. Move this up stream so that when you are ready to pull the trigger you are further along in the process. You do not want to get caught feeling like you can only do what you did last year, because you are lacking a key ingredient: time.

What do you hope attendees will take away from this session?

We will start by truly understanding the reason why compressed timelines are plaguing the event industry today. We will develop a camaraderie and understanding that we are all facing these same issues and develop strategies to effectively design and understand the limitations of the compressed timeline vs. the traditional pre-COVID execution schedules.

LEVEL UP YOUR LINKEDIN GAME!

Leanne Calderwood, founder of LeanneCalderwood.com, will lead the session “Lev­el Up Your LinkedIn Game!” at WEC. We spoke with her about common LinkedIn mis­takes and using the platform the right way.

Can you tell us about one common way meeting professionals misuse or underuse LinkedIn?

I feel many are still scrolling the feed looking for answers and feeling disappointed when they don’t find anything. LinkedIn is a platform that goes be­yond the scroll. It’s about professionals being in­tentional and time spent engaging with the content and thus creating deeper connections.

Why is it critical for meeting professionals to use LinkedIn in the right way in order to be success­ful?

Our industry and its people are always changing. Staying on top of trends and putting yourself out there as an engager and thought leader will bring you top-of-mind when opportunities arise.

What do you hope attendees will take away from this session?

I hope they will be encouraged to look at the plat­form differently and use it beyond its old reputation of being a job-posting and job-seeking platform.

CONTRACTING FOR RECOVERY

Joshua Grimes, Esq., of the Grimes Law Offices and Brenda Howes of the Howes Group will lead the session “Contracting for Recovery: Safeguarding Your Business for the Next Normal” at WEC. We spoke with them about the changed contracts landscape and “hidden” provisions.

What’s one piece of contracting advise you would offer for this changed landscape?

Brenda Howes: The key will always be to mitigate risk. Identifying the “next risk” is the challenge so ensure that your wording encompasses a “list of possibilities” and not just a specific reason to invoke the Force Majeure clauses.

Joshua Grimes: Use your experience and negoti­ating skills to reach a fair contract and protect your organization’s interests.

What do you hope attendees will take away from this session?

Grimes and Howes: Participants need to have confidence to “proceed and sign” their meeting contracts knowing exactly what their organiza­tions’ obligations, costs and risks will be—and that the agreement includes critical components to help ensure that the contract is fair and allows both par­ties to be successful.

 

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Blair Potter

Blair Potter is director of media operations for MPI. He likes toys and collects cats (or is it the other way around?).