PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — A new era begins this week for the
troubled Pennsylvania Convention Center. Day-to-day operations will now be run
by a private company — which faces the daunting task of overcoming long-running
labor issues that may have driven customers away.
With the booking of major conventions on the decline, the
Convention Center board has hired the firm SMG, based in Conshohocken, to take
over operations, replacing paid staff. The company already runs more than 70
other centers around the country, and Senior Vice President Bob McClintock says
that experience will help here in Philly.
“The meeting planners that are looking at Philadelphia
already work with our company,” he says. “They work with them in Chicago, in
San Francisco, in Detroit. And so because of that understand how we run our
business and what they can expect here in Philadelphia.”
But SMG faces huge hurdles, mainly in the perception among
meeting planners that the Pennsylvania Convention Center is too costly, and
that dealing with the six unions which set up the trade shows is a hassle.
McClintock believes the planners will have confidence in SMG.
“They understand that they’re dealing with management that
knows how the industry can run,” McClintock says. “And it’s not about running it
non-union. It’s about running it effectively and efficiently in a multi-trade
environment.”
McClintock vows that his staff will be an active presence on
the floor of all trade shows, to ensure efficiencies and resolve disputes
between the unions and organizers, and among the six unions.
“You can’t manage labor from your office. You have to manage
labor from being on the floor, he says. “And SMG is going to have a team of
professionals there involved with labor, but more importantly involved with the
organizer and the exhibitor in ensuring that they’re getting the best possible
product on the trade show floor. The efficiencies that we can put in place
through being better managers of the process, the efficiencies that we can
bring about by ensuring that the (union) jurisdictional lines are clean and
smooth: that’s where the cost savings will come from.”
SMG’s takeover comes ahead of a steep decline in major
convention bookings beginning next year and continuing through at least 2016.
McClintock believes the SMG takeover will eventually change the sour perception
of the center that prompted the decline.
“We have to be an easy place to do business at every aspect
of our operation,” he says, “whether its on the financial side, or on the sales
side or on the meeting planner side, and, without question, on labor.”
Source: CBSLocal.com
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