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3 Pillars For Event Success In Another Uncertain Year

3 Pillars For Event Success In Another Uncertain Year

graphic our story jrAs Omicron cases surged earlier this year, major events across multiple industries were once again forced to send the dreaded “This event has been postponed/canceled” emails to thousands of registered attendees. Reminiscent of 2020, marketers who relied on experiential marketing for everything from brand awareness to lead generation scrambled to adjust to yet more unexpected adversity.

With the past two years keeping everyone on their toes, it’s high time marketers stop hedging their bets on in-person versus virtual and instead establish the infrastructure to be prepared for the unexpected.

Experienced marketers can handle seamless transitions for their targeted content — regardless of when, where and how events are taking place — if they deploy a customer-centric strategy and a comprehensive event management platform. Of course, with so many marketing services and event tech point solutions vying for attention, it can be difficult to know where to start. Regardless of where your events are happening, follow these guidelines to ensure you’re driving the most value out of your programs in 2022.

1. Embrace The Power Of The Pivot

Experienced marketers know to plan for the unexpected with contingency plans at the ready. In event marketing, unexpected hiccups have always been unavoidable, whether it’s a caterer not showing up, a vendor falling through at the last minute or poor streaming quality for a keynote. With even more uncertainty around events in 2022, marketers need to have backups for their backup plans, with multiple mapped routes to reach their goals and successfully engage customers.

In short, we hope for the best but plan for the worst. Successfully pivoting takes more than just planning. It’s crucial to have technology that allows you to implement changes on a moment’s notice without sacrificing the customer experience.

Marketers depend on robust functionality and require a top-to-bottom platform that’s as nimble and agile as we are. We need the tools and real-time data insights to effectively target, collaborate and customize content, build customer relationships, make real-time business decisions on the ground and capture live interactions and preferences in an attributable way.

2. Content Is King, Regardless Of Where It’s Consumed

While many marketers still believe nothing can replace the value of a good handshake, the past two years have proven that, at least for a period of time, business can still successfully be conducted without physical interaction. The key to a successful event isn’t the venue; it’s the content.

Even the sleekest, most chic and alluring venue or event destination cannot make up for poor planning and subpar content. Without engaging content, attendees will become bored and that’s the last thing any event marketer wants in any format. An in-person conference with dull content is far worse than a virtual event that keeps attendees’ eyes on screens and engaged with other attendees.

The No. 1 rule for events is to invest in thoughtful, relevant content personalized and targeted to each attendee based on their interests, preferences, past behaviors and the stage of their unique journey with your brand. This process enables 10,000 unique experiences versus an event for 10,000 attendees. 

3. Don’t Silo Your Event

Whether in-person, virtual or hybrid, events are a powerful marketing channel. However, enterprise marketers all too often silo their event marketing tools from the rest of their martech stack, hindering their ability to aggregate customer data in a meaningful way across events.

Platforms and tools used for event marketing and management need to be closely integrated with MAPs, CRM and other tools to ensure a comprehensive and real-time picture of the customer journey. Failure to do this will negatively impact data quality and therefore future experiences with the brand.

Conversely, the ability to collect and analyze event engagement data in real-time, integrated with other marketing tools, enables a smooth and familiar customer experience and an efficient campaign workflow on a year-round basis. For example, we need to recognize an attendee who just registered for an event is the same customer who downloaded a specific E-book or white paper a few months prior, and automatically recommend tracks and content that map back to related topic areas.

This takes the guesswork out of agenda planning for the customer and instills confidence that they’ll gain value from attending your event. As event data is captured, it can be used year-round for continual engagement with relevant touchpoints mapped back to their event experience. Integrated, end-to-end technologies that break down data silos can optimize the customer experience from registration through post-event touchpoints, creating unmatched value for both customers and marketers. 

Events aren’t successful because they’re in-person; they’re successful because they engage and strengthen relationships with captivating, highly relevant content. When planning your programs in 2022, don’t put all your eggs in one in-person or virtual basket. Embrace the unknown, ensure you’re flexible enough to pivot and create tailored, captivating content targeted with customer preferences and insights. When done right, your event marketing programs will transcend the binary choice of virtual and physical and deliver personalized content through engaging experiences to grow customer relationships and strengthen brand affinity.


JR Sherman is the CEO of RainFocus. With more than 20 years of leading highly impactful service and SaaS businesses, Sherman is highly regarded for his expertise in SaaS, events, marketing and experiential marketing. Sherman was named one of the 25 Most Influential Executives by Business Travel News. 

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Research Week Offers Both Virtual and In-person Events This Year

Research Week, the annual showcase of UC Merced’s important explorations into some of the world’s most pressing challenges, kicks off Monday with the Sierra Nevada Research Institute’s symposium on climate.

SNRI researchers are at the forefront of innovative tools, technology and thinking about resilient and sustainable ecosystems, food systems and futures. Everyone is welcome to join the annual SNRI Research Symposium as members discuss new climate research and approaches for ag, energy, infrastructure and the environment.

Research Week runs Monday through Friday and is hosted by the Office of Research and Economic Development, along with the many institutes and centers at UC Merced.

“We are genuinely excited to highlight the incredible research that goes on at UC Merced and to offer faculty, staff, students, and members of the community the chance to learn about each other’s work and intellectual passions,” said interim Vice Chancellor for Research and Economic Development Marjorie Zatz. “I hope everyone will take advantage of the many opportunities during Research Week.”

Like most of the events, the SNRI symposium will be virtual. One of the few-in person offerings is the chance to get out and go for a walk on Tuesday and tour the Merced Vernal Pools and Grassland Reserve. People can learn about the ancient soils, the protected species and the shallow pools that form each year.

Research Week offers many opportunities for people to learn about topics such as intellectual property, biosafety and the culture of lab safety, UC Merced’s research facilities and a variety of subjects faculty members specialize in.

New this year: faculty flash talks. Faculty will offer 15-minute sessions to share current projects for students to be aware of research opportunities for the current academic year, summer or the next academic year.

The Health Sciences Research Institute ’s symposium will feature graduate students and faculty speaking on a broad range of topics, including an introduction to HSRI’s new San Joaquin Valley Center for Community Air Assessment and Injustice Reduction (SJV CC-AIR), for a taste of the broad range of work being conducted by HSRI members.

Topics include “Predicting and Promoting COVID-19 Preventive Behaviors,” “The Effects of Electronic Cigarette Additives on Lung Surfactant Membranes,” “Toward a New Paradigm in Molecular Diagnostics of Infectious Diseases” and “Improving Self-Regulation and Social Support for Diabetes During Emerging Adulthood.”

The week will continue with guest speakers from Yosemite National Park, the U.S. Forest Service Pacific Southwest Research Station and the greater National Park Service discussing research partnerships and opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students. They will discuss with students how to navigate the federal job application process and access amazing lab and field research experiences.

During Grad STORY, participants can hear about the journeys graduate student researchers have been on to get to UC Merced and during their time here and get a chance to ask the students questions.

There will also be a Resource Center for Community Engaged Scholarship Community Reception to celebrate research conducted in collaboration with the community. Those who attend will learn about current research projects and how to get involved in future projects to connect research with community goals and hear from faculty and students about their projects from across the Central Valley that directly involve community members.

To see the whole schedule, register for events and get passcodes for the virtual gatherings, visit the Research Week website.

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World-class squash event returns to Calgary after year off due to COVID

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Professional squash players from across the world are suiting up — masks optional, of course — for what’s hoped will be a smashing return to Calgary courts after a year away.
That’s thanks to the Professional Squash Association swinging through the city for the first time in 24 months after COVID squished the annual stop in 2021.

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“This will be our eighth year hosting the event, and we are known quite well on the international pro tour for our Calgary hospitality,” said Meghan Glenday of the Calgary Women’s Squash Week committee. “It’s been a bumpy ride for the pro players these past couple of years … with travel restrictions, visa delays, billeting restrictions and tournament cancellations, in general.”

But it’s a go in 2022.

The Calgary CFO Consulting Services PSA Women’s Squash Week serves up play beginning Wednesday at the Calgary Winter Club, one day after COVID masking protocols are being lifted in Alberta.

The PSA Challenger 20 level tourney — one of five worldwide this week and the only one scheduled for North America — runs through Sunday. The Calgary stop is the biggest of those events in terms of prize money, with a $20,000 purse up for grabs.

“We usually have an amateur women’s tournament alongside the pro event,” Glenday said. ”But with club capacity restraints leading up to this year’s event, we had to drop the amateur side, which brings in approximately 70 amateur women players. We’re hoping to host the full pro-am event in 2023.”

For this year, however, the spotlight is solely on the 24 high-profile players in pursuit of PSA glory.

And topping that list of world-class women is Calgary’s own Danielle Letourneau, the world-ranked No. 20 talent. Fresh off finishing top 20 in a Chicago tour stop, the Cornell University graduate gets a bye through the first round in her bid to defend the crown she won 24 months ago at the Calgary Winter Club. The local hope is Letourneau is — at very least — in Sunday’s 2 p.m. championship match.

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“We are thrilled to have Danielle as our top seed,” Glenday said. “Seeded fourth back in early March 2020, Danielle managed to win our tournament title, and since then her world ranking has moved from No. 39 to now No. 20.

“She has been training in Egypt, so it will be interesting to see how her style of squash and techniques and strategies have evolved since then.”

Australia’s Donna Lobban — the No. 2 seed here and ranked 29th on the world list — and the Hong Kong duo of Tze Lok Ho — at No. 3 — and Liu Tsz-Ling round out the rest of tourney’s top four seeds. Meanwhile, the 28-year-old hometown star Letourneau will be joined by three fellow Canadians — Regina’s Nikki Todd (No. 99), Winnipeg’s Hannah Blatt (No. 154) and 17-year-old Calgarian Jana Dweek, who is ranked fourth among under-19 Canadian phenoms.

“For us, this week is all about celebrating and promoting women in squash,” Glenday said. “And what better way to inspire and motivate everyone in the squash community than watching some of the top female players in the world.”

PSA Challenger tourneys are entry points for up-and-coming squash pros looking to a more international level of competition.

“The Calgary Winter Club and the city-wide squash community look forward to this event every March,” Glenday added. “Being absent for the last two years has everyone excited, including the players, to see top-level squash back in town. Players from around the world — as far from England, Egypt, Australia and Hong Kong — will play in this tournament.”

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Hunky Jesus, Foxy Mary Competitions Will Return As In-Person Events for Easter Sunday This Year

Hunky Jesus, Foxy Mary Competitions Will Return As In-Person Events for Easter Sunday This Year

The pandemic forced the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence to move their Easter festivities away from Dolores Park… and onto the internet. But for the first time in two years, the Sisters are expected to bring their Easter Sunday shenanigans back to the Mission District park on April 17.

Easter in San Francisco is celebrated quite a bit differently than any other part of the country. Sure, there are traditional holiday tropes to partake in — there’s never a shortage of midnight masses to attend; we’re sure this year will also see groups of children search for Easter eggs in family-friendly events across the seven-by-seven — but the crowning jewel of SF’s left-of-center Easter Sunday celebrations is the one hosted by the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence at Dolores Park, which pedestals heaps of queer frivolity.

And nowhere during the day’s happenings is that more evident than when the Sisters put on their Hunky Jesus and Foxy Mary competitions — which, for the first time since 2019, will be held IRL this upcoming Easter weekend.

“The Sisters will be back to Dolores Park for their traditional Easter Celebration in 2022,” reads a Facebook announcement about the update. Aptly called the “Sister’s Easter: Back to Old Habits!,” the mid-April party will see the event celebrated in a true return to form that will also include an in-person Hunky Jesus contest. Though the Foxy Mary contest wasn’t announced on the Facebook page, it was, however, included in a Tweet sharing the news that the Sister’s would take over Dolores Park again this Easter Sunday.

“More information” will be announced soon, but rest assured it appears Dolores Park will again be alive with untraditional extravaganzas come April 17.

For a trip down memory lane, revisit our coverage of 2019’s in-person Hunky Jesus contest.

Related: Hunky Jesus Contest Returns to Dolores Park for Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence’s 40th Anniversary [2019]

This Year’s Online Hunky Jesus and Foxy Mary Contests Helped Our Spirits Rise Again [2020]

Photo: “Baby Jesus” winning the Hunky Jesus contest in 2015. (Courtesy of Twitter via @babiedboi)

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Two major Bay Area events are coming back in person this year

Two major Bay Area events are coming back in person this year

Following declining COVID cases and California’s recent decision to forgo mask mandates, two iconic Bay Area events are poised to return in person this year. 

San Francisco Pride announced that it will return to the streets on June 25 and 26 for the first time since the pandemic, ABC7 reported. Similarly, after two consecutive years of cancellations and virtual events, swaths of stoners are set to take over Hippie Hill for 420 – an unofficial holiday celebrating marijuana.  

“We do plan on taking up as much space as possible on Market Street in San Francisco on the last weekend of June and we are so excited to see you all again,” SF Pride board president Carolyn Wysinger told ABC7 in a video interview. 


“This year is going to be special,” the official Instagram page for the Hippie Hill event wrote under their announcement.

The two events, which had to either go virtual or cancel their 2020 and 2021 celebrations altogether, are considered integral to the cultural fabric of San Francisco. Now that they’re back, the Bay Area can expect to see parades, performances and other offshoots of Pride events at Dolores Park

While Pride is still in its early stages of planning, registration is currently open for exhibitors, entertainers and sponsors. Nominees for grand marshals — local heroes who have contributed to the Bay Area’s LGBTQ+ community or to society at large — are also listed on Pride’s website. 
 
Hippie Hill, Haight Street’s unofficial landmark and de facto gathering place to celebrate 420, boasts a long lineup of in-person cannabis vendors: Cookies SF, Weedmaps and United Playaz are just a few. 

Wysinger told ABC7 that there will be COVID safety precautions in place during Pride events. However, organizers for the Hippie Hill event have yet to list any details about safety measures.  

San Francisco Pride and Hippie Hill organizers did not respond to SFGATE’s request for comment before publication time.

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After a two year hiatus, spring festivals, events return in Richmond

After a two year hiatus, spring festivals, events return in Richmond

RICHMOND, Va. (WWBT) – As we look ahead to warmer weather in the next couple of weeks, spring will also bring back some outdoor events and gatherings that have been postponed over the last two years.

On March 12, Shamrock The Block will be making its return to Scott’s Addition, along with the Church Hill Irish Festival on March 26-27.

“It feels like it’s been about 20 years honestly; it’s been too long,” Stokes McCune, director of the Church Hill Irish Festival.

McCune says that he has been disappointed that the event could not be held for the last two years, but he expects to see anywhere from 20,000 to 25,000 at this year’s event.

He says to make sure the event goes smoothly, organizers are working with the health department on any guidance needed for the event.

“We just want to make sure it’s a safe and fun event for everyone,” McCune said. “We’ll do whatever they tell us to do to make it happen, but we’re just excited about it happening and getting people back up here on the Hill, and seeing what we do with the Irish Festival, and having a good time – that’s what we do.”

Also, in March, the Richmond Flying Squirrels will be selling tickets for its 2022 season, starting at Nutzy’s Block Party on March 5.

“It’s not just us rolling up an individual ticket window and selling tickets like April 12 or July 4; it’s a whole thing. It’s a whole festival right out here on Squirrels way,” said Todd Parnell, CEO of the Flying Squirrels.

Parnell says, for now, they are still waiting to hear from Major League Baseball in April if there will be any additional guidance for spectators at sporting events.

If the number of Omicron cases becomes lower, he does not believe any capacity limitations will be put on stadiums like at the beginning of last season.

Parnell says this year they’ve been planning out events for fans all season long and can’t wait to celebrate old traditions.

The free block party event will be on March 5 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

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