
- •Основы mice туризма
- •Санкт-Петербург
- •Содержание
- •Contents
- •Historical background
- •International organizations
- •The demand side of business travel and tourism
- •The geography of demand
- •Individual cities and business travel and tourism
- •Conclusion
- •The impacts of business travel and tourism
- •The economic impact of business travel and tourism
- •Positive
- •Negative
- •The environmental impacts of business travel and tourism
- •Positive
- •Negative
- •The social impacts of business travel and tourism
- •Positive
- •Negative
- •Impacts and different types of business travel and tourism
- •Impacts on different sectors in business travel and tourism
- •Impacts and different types of destinations
- •Conclusion
- •Discussion points and essay questions
- •Exercise
- •Types of business travel sector activities
- •Types of meetings
- •Meeting styles
- •Meeting frequency options
- •Suppliers
- •Venue selection criteria
- •Chapter 3.2. Conferences: classification, types. Destinations
- •Public Conferences
- •Conferences with Exhibitions
- •Internal Company Meetings
- •Virtual Conferences
- •Chapter 3.3. Exhibitions: classification, types. Destinations
- •Trade fairs in history
- •Contemporary trade fairs
- •Moral incentives
- •Forms of incentives
- •Incentive travel
- •Intermediaries
- •Organisation of incentive programmes
- •Destinations
- •Chapter 5. Intermediaries. Extra services.
- •Business travel professionals
- •Overview of Global Reservation Systems Tomorrow – Today
- •Galileo - Computerised Reservation System
- •Exercise Search the Internet data and prepare presentation about other global e-reservation systens Chapter 7. Recruitment. Education. Certification.
- •Training programs
- •International Association of Professional Congress Organizers (iapco)
- •Mpi has also pioneered the provision of training and personal development materials via the Internet.
- •Chapter 8. The future of mice-tourism: analysis, problems, tendencies
- •Mice tourism in Africa
- •Mice tourism in America
- •Mice tourism in Middle East Region
- •The future of the industry
- •Conference planning guidelines
- •Preamble
- •Congratulations!
- •General
- •Permission
- •Set a Date
- •Organize
- •Reserve Rooms
- •Program
- •Promotions
- •Housing
- •Management Tools
- •Vendor Displays
- •Conference Materials
- •Name Tags
- •Equipment and Support
- •Computers
- •Entertainment
- •Summary
- •Кафедра профессионального иностранного языка
- •Основы mice-туризма
- •Специальность 080502(8) – Экономика и управление на предприятии туризма и гостиничного хозяйства
- •Санкт-Петербург
- •4. Содержание разделов и тем дисциплины
- •Контрольные вопросы
- •1. Introduction to business travel
- •• Discuss the main impacts of business travel, as well as the major opportunities, challenges and threats affecting this industry.
- •2. Individual business travel
- •• Describe responses by individual business travel suppliers and intermediaries to changes in demand and in their operating environments.
- •3. The meetings industry
- •4. Incentive travel
- •5. The exhibitions industry
- •6. Corporate hospitality
- •7. The business and pleasure interface
- •Итоговой тест
- •Introduction to business travel
- •Match the words below with their definitions:
- •Individual business travel
- •The Meeting industry
- •Incentive travel
- •The exhibition industry
- •Corporate hospitality
International organizations
ACTE
The Association of Corporate Travel Executives (ACTE) is a not-for-profit, international association established to provide executive-level global education and peer-to-peer networking opportunities. ACTE members are ready to expand their knowledge base and share their own unique experiences and perspectives. Membership spans all of business travel, from corporate buyers to agencies to suppliers, and accords all sectors equal membership. ACTE serves more than 6,000 travel executives in 50 countries.
MPI
Meeting Professionals International is the largest association of meeting professionals with over 19.000 members in 60 countries. There are currently 60 chapters, and an additional 4 chapters in formation. MPI's current membership ratio is 46 % planners and 54 % suppliers. MPI members are dedicated professionals in planning, managing and supplying services to the dynamic meeting industry. They strive to help both meeting planners and suppliers to enhance their professional growth while saving them valuable time and money through superior educational programming, timely and topical communication, extensive resources, professional interaction, and exclusive discounts.
ICCA
International Congress & Convention Association
was founded in 1963 by a group of travel agents. Their first and foremost aim was to evaluate practical ways to get the travel industry involved in the rapidly expanding market of international meetings and to exchange actual information related to their operations in this market. This initiative soon proved to have been taken at the right moment: the meeting industry expanded even more rapidly than foreseen. As a result of which candidates from all over the world applied for ICCA membership. ICCA provides educational programmes, concerted promotion through international meeting news, a membership directory, international trade shows, database, contacts with international clients and networking with ICCA members etc. ICCA now is one of the most prominent organisations in the world of international meetings. It is the only association that comprises a membership representing the main specialists in handling, transporting and accommodating international events. With more than 600 members in 80 countries around the world, it is certainly the most global organisation within the meetings industry. ICCA has offices in the Netherlands, Malaysia and Uruguay.
IAPCO
International Association of Professional Congress Organizers
is a professional organization for organizers of international, regional, and national congresses, conferences and events. Founded in 1968, IAPCO has 100 members in 38 countries all of whom take part in a full quality assessment programme. IAPCO is not so much a business network as a business forum for sharing knowledge; an international branding for quality in every aspect of its output and membership. lAPCO's objectives are to set and maintain high professional standards; to contribute to the study, theory and practice of international meetings; to organize training programmes at all levels.
The list of business travel organizations is rather long. Among such organizations are international and regional ones:
•AIPC - International Association of Congress Centres
•ASAE - ASAE & The Center for Association Leadership
•AUMA - Ausstellungs- und Messeausschuss der deutschen Wirtschaft
•EFCT - the unique European Federation of Convention Bureaus
•EMC - European Marketing Confederation
•EVVC - European Association of Event Centers
•EXSA - Exhibition Association of Southern Africa
•HCCE Historic Conference Centres of Europe
•IACVB - Destination Marketing Association International
•IAEM - International Association for Exhibition Management
•EFCT - European Federation of Conference Town
•IFEA - International Festival & Events Association Europe
•IFES - International Federation of Exhibitions and Events Services
•MIAA - Meetings & Events Australia
Professional Conference organizers
Association of British Professional Conference Organisers
International Association of Professional Congress Organisers
International Congress & Convention Association
Professional Convention Management Association
Meetings Industry Association - UK conference Organisers
Meeting Professionals International
Conclusion
We have seen that business travel and tourism is a very old phenomenon but that it has grown, probably, more in the last fifty years than in all the previous centuries put together. It has also been seen that it is now a truly global industry, and that new special forms of business tourism have developed in the last few decades of the twentieth century. However, at the end of the chapter, we have noted that there are some doubts over the future of business travel and tourism.
Discussion points and essay questions
-
Discuss what you consider to be the three most important factors in the growth of business travel and tourism since 1950.
-
Discuss and explain the current geography of business travel and tourism demand.
What lessons can we learn from the history of business travel and tourism that might help accurately to predict its future?
Exercise
Select one of the following forms of business travel and tourism:
-
conferences or conventions
-
trade fairs and exhibitions
-
individual business trips.
Produce a brief history of your chosen subject from its beginnings to the present day, highlighting changes in its nature and geography. You should note any problems you have in obtaining relevant information.
Chapter 2. What is influenced on MICE-tourism development
On completion of this chapter students should be able to understand:
-
The demand side of MICE tourism
-
The impacts of MICE tourism