CUSEC 2009 Retrospective Part 3: The Venue
One of the toughest things about planning CUSEC 2009 was finding the right combination of conference centre and hotel. Ideally we were hoping to hold the conference in the same hotel that delegates were staying in, minimizing the distance that people had to travel in the morning. We searched the city high and low, trying to negotiate not only for the best rates in terms of conference space, but also for a hotel that would give us a discounted room rate.
To complicate matters further, CUSEC is dual-tracked. That means that except for keynote speakers, there would be two presentations going on simultaneously. This meant that we’d need to have two separate rooms. One big room that splits in two doesn’t work well because of the fact that it takes time to set up the barrier, and you’d have to have to sets of AV equipment which can be linked together for keynotes and then separated for dual-tracked sessions. We need two separate rooms. We also need room to host a career fair and for students to mingle.
Those of you that have attended CUSEC more than once will know that CUSEC has been growing steadily. In 2008, we had way too many people standing at the back. We had to add more chairs at the last minute. A lot of people have asked me why we didn’t return to that venue and the reason is, quite simply, the fact that they don’t have enough room for us. Those conference rooms we had in 2008? Yeah, they actually have a posted capacity of 280 people. We were well over 300 people jam packed in there. We were anticipating even more growth this year, and we knew that returning to that venue wouldn’t work for us again.
We explored nearly every hotel in the city and met with many of their managers. (And by “we” I mean that the bulk of the work was done by our Director of Logistics, Claudiu, and our Director of Events, Kyle.) A lot of the places we checked out which had adequate conference space also had prohibitively expensive hotel rooms, and we wouldn’t have accepted a higher price than $100 per night for quad occupancy. Yes, our students crash four people to a room 1. The good news is that booking some fifty rooms in a hotel during an otherwise low-occupancy period is a bargaining chip. And we got some pretty good offers, but none of them were good enough. We had to play hardball. (Again, by “we”, I mean Claudiu. The man is a star.)
I’ll spare you the grimy details, stories of near-success and near-failure — since I obviously can’t mention the names of all the people and hotels we dealt with. Eventually, we had to give up on the idea of hosting CUSEC in the same hotel that housed delegates, since we simply couldn’t work out the numbers. Suffice it to say that the venue we nailed this year had everything we needed (and in fact, had previously hosted CUSEC as well). They even offered us hotel rooms at a very inexpensive rate, but unfortunately they had very few rooms with two double beds, and so we opted to stay in the hotel across the street. If you’re wondering why the cost of the hotel was more than $100 per night — well, we had a near-unanimous decision amongst all the head delegates to go for it anyway, since the next-best option was to stay at a hotel that was a good 10 minute walk away.
Unfortunately, our venue didn’t have as much room as last year for the career fair and mingling. We thought the atrium (where the four booths were set up) was enough space, but apparently not. It was too crowded. The reason we want the career fair in an open lobby area is so that it’s visible. Delegates will see the booths as they transition between the two rooms, and as they go get coffee. One of the consistent notes of feedback we get from our sponsors is that they like the fact that they’re visible and not shoved into an anterior conference room down the hallway from the main conference. Hallways are the devil. If a delegate has to walk down a hallway to get somewhere, he or she will very likely simply not go. You might disagree, but after years of attending these kinds of events this is what I’ve noticed. An advantage of not having many sponsors this year was that we managed to fit the ones we did have into such a cramped space.
This was the first year we were looking for a venue that could accommodate such a large number of people, and indeed we expect CUSEC to grow even more in the future. This year taught us a lot, and that will help next year’s team decide on a venue as well.
-
Believe me, once you’ve attended enough conferences and competitions, you quickly get over any insecurities related to sharing a bed with another dude (or dudette). ↩
-
http://blog.cusec.net/2009/03/16/cusec-2009-retrospective-part-3-the-venue/ Everything CUSEC » CUSEC 2009 Retrospective Part 3: The Venue

