Conference & Meetings World Issue 100 | Page 43

Smart venues The world’s smartest conference venues CMW EMBARKS ON A GLOBETROTTING TOUR OF SOME OF THE WORLD’S SMARTEST CONFERENCE VENUES TO FIND OUT WHAT SETS THEM APART, AND HOW THEY STAY ON THE CUTTING-EDGE. STUART WOOD REPORTS hat makes a venue ‘smart’? In this modern age, there are many ways we could define the innovations taking place in conference and congress centres around the globe. One thing is certain, however – venues are adapting, and many of them are now integrating technology as diverse and as intelligent as the delegates that walk their hallways. For this feature, we spoke to the brains behind some of the most inventive venues in the world, employing technology in particularly creative and business-savvy ways. Our first stop takes us to The Netherlands, where if you look out of the tour bus to your left, you may see a rather unique piece of tech preparing to face the music… Facial RAI-cognition The RAI Amsterdam completed its initial construction in the 1960s, but the venue has since expanded to become a cluster of several interconnected conference and exhibition spaces in the Dutch capital. It recently partnered with event technology company fielddrive to pilot a new way for delegates to check in to events at the RAI. Facial recognition is able to scan the likeness of delegates as they enter the building, offering them a fast and secure entrance. The key at the RAI, however, is not technology for the sake of technology, says Pim Schoonderwoerd, the venue’s IT Product Specialist. Instead, it is about using technology to provide a smoother user experience. “The more advanced the tech becomes, the more invisible it should become,” he says. “Here at the RAI, we offer service-oriented products, not technology-led products. But technology can be used to facilitate service, and this is our goal with facial recognition.” The facial recognition tech went into pilot status in January of this year, and is currently in the process of being rolled out across RAI titles, and as a service for external organisers. Schoonderwoerd says it will allow staff working at check-in to personally greet attendees as they arrive, while having all their necessary information easily to hand. “If there are 24 registration desks at the RAI, facial recognition can reduce the number of people needed to stand there, while still providing strong customer service,” he says. Schoonderwoerd highlights the importance of practicality when it comes to technology in events: “Technology is not the goal, the goal is what we do with it. For example, virtual reality – it is an answer, but I think many in the industry do not yet know to what question. IT is just the carrier. Content is key.” ISSUE 100 / CONFERENCE & MEETINGS WORLD / 43