Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Strategic Sourcing of Audio Visual Services


Strategic Sourcing of Audio Visual Services

By Joel A Feingold

c. Joel A Feingold, 2012

Introduction

Those of us who plan meetings and special events in remote markets often hire local AV companies and crew. On the venue side, many facilities have made an agreement to designate one AV company as the exclusive provider of services. Such an arrangement may stifle competition and potentially reduce service quality. On the client side, some programs require the highest degree of technical excellence and others the most specialized gear. Other programs are more mundane and require sustained attention even if the production is not sophisticated. On the labor side some facilities are union halls and others provide no guidance at all, thus making the planner’s own research even more crucial. There are several decision points and some thoughtful planning can result in improved quality and reduced, or at least controlled costs.

Contracting process inclusions

Venue contracts often do not address important AV production items. A planner should try to negotiate the venue contract so that known additional charges are part of the complementary items and services provided. Power and internet connectivity charges can add up. At some properties “show” power (3 phase, 240 volt service) might amount to several thousand dollars. A hard line Ethernet connection might be a few hundred per day per connection. Some venues charge for risers or may have limited numbers of the size tables needed that might lead to cross rentals. Others may have man lifts that bill by the day. By addressing these sorts of items in prior to signing the deal certain costs can be contained.

Exclusive vs. outside AV vendor

Addressing the various complexities of the “Exclusive” provider situation during contracting can be an important step. Many properties have made arrangements with large AV companies essentially to create an in house concession. Convenience and consistent quality are thereby obtained.

Unfortunately however, these arrangements are often coupled with exclusivity – or the representation of exclusivity – and charges and other types of barriers are put in place to discourage competition. It goes without saying that the pricing power associated with such an arrangement allows the parties to make a higher margin, paid for by planners’ clients.

In addition, the vendor’s quality level may not always suffice. Quality is most likely to be reasonable for many programs because it is in the property’s interest to have good quality too. And since certain gear is warehoused on property most last minute requests can be accommodated. But for some programs quality may be lacking, depending upon what is required. This is especially true with increasing requirements of customization and technical excellence. In general, the exclusivity arrangements may lead to on site complacency, upper management one-size-fits-all directives, or other symptoms that create problems for planners and clients.

Sources of gear

The need for an exclusive AV provider to maintain a stock of commonly used equipment and store it in the property’s highly limited space is combined with typical corporate ROI considerations, leading the companies to own inadequate amounts and types of more specialized gear. This pressure on the AV companies’ margin is in part caused by the properties that have driven “too hard” a bargain, the margin being too thin to accommodate crucial inventory. Since the AV companies also choose to prohibit cross rentals as policy, it is not uncommon for gear to be out of spec or less than ideal. A planner needs to begin to consider alternative sources of gear, and that leads into needs for specific knowledge, adding a producer or technical director to the program staff, or contracting with an outside vendor, not the exclusive AV provider.

There are many sources of AV gear. These range from “full service production companies” to specialized high end sound, lighting or video production companies, and most interestingly, the top line live rock and roll production companies are also excellent suppliers in the right situations. Learning who’s who in the equipment rental and show production space is not accomplished quickly and as mentioned above, an experienced show manager might be added to the meeting team.

One immensely difficult problem when working in a remote location is finding a vendor you can trust. As a planner may be a one off client, we might find the deliverables to be rather different than we expected and contracted. If one is fortunate enough to have a good national network from which to obtain referrals, one can mitigate this risk. Sometimes, more often than clients might want, the best course of action is to bring in a company from afar, even if the expense is higher.

AV companies carry many different brands and models of sound, lights and video support. It is not unusual for audio speaker systems to be adequate for voice and marginal for music. Some companies always bring extra equipment. Others are sticklers for quality. In such a case it is a good bet that the show will sound better and look better, because the gear that looks the same has better guts in it. For example, there are many “heads” that go inside the same microphone shell. They look the same but they are not, and most people can hear the difference. This is meaningful as if the audio is not natural then audience brainpower is wasted processing the sound when it should devoted to absorbing content. So briefly summarizing, there is a rationale for hiring different, and sometimes multiple vendors, to optimize quality and price.

Use of highly senior staff

Above I alluded to the need for certain staff with specific knowledge, and since AV is at its core a specialty, a planner always needs competent technicians to operate audio, lights, video switching, graphics, work with the headlining band, manage the stage, and so on. On larger shows a qualified production manager or technical director can be beneficial. On still more complex programs a producer, to whom multiple technical directors report, may be a necessity. Often producers or technical directors double as production managers. Individual backgrounds and expertise determines just what responsibilities such a staffer should hold. To help explain this I will use myself as an example. I call myself a producer and in my work I frequently double as a production manager, but I would never call myself a technical director, as I am not technical, I am a manager. There are other people who have immense technical knowledge but lack the organizational and communications skills to be a manager or the necessary polish to interface with clients and their guests.

Local vs. traveling staff

As one might surmise, producers, production managers and technical directors often travel for their clients. However, it is also not uncommon for these suppliers to reside in different locations from their clients. In our highly interconnected world their offices travel with them. Specialized audio engineers and lighting designers also fit into this scenario as do certain video and graphics operators. There are however, a large number of competent technicians and if the bar is not too high, one can have pretty consistent success with local staff in almost any major city. (A head’s up: other countries may limit what duties traveling staff may perform.) Where there is an exclusive AV provider it is that company’s responsibility to source the staff. One hopes for excellence and usually gets acceptable quality. (As mentioned above, the higher the bar, the riskier this situation.) Depending upon the show a planner, in consultation with the show producer, or relying on the producer’s good business judgment, would determine what lead staff to travel.

Union vs. non-union crew

Finally, restrictions about sources of on site labor can be a source of concern. In some venues one may be allowed to bring in a gear vendor of choice but the crew decision is taken away from planners and clients, as the venue is a union shop. Generally the union will be either Teamsters or IATSE and sometimes both, for different work. It seems everyone has their own opinion about whether this is good, bad or neither. I suggest that neither is the correct answer. The choice of a union or non-union venue may have cost ramifications, but that is a consideration that has to be factored in prior to contracting the venue, not during the production of the show. And in a non-union venue, many clients would choose to pay a “prevailing wage” as a policy decision, eliminating a cost differential.

As with many aspects of business, keeping an open mind is critical. If you had a road show and were stopping in Twin Falls, Idaho, and you’d never worked there, to whom would you turn to hire crew? At a minimum you know you need crew who have handled lights and sound, truss and staging, cables and safeties, so you think perhaps folks who have worked in the local theater, and that leads to IATSE – the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees. There will be a chapter in Idaho and it will have members who will happily drive to Twin Falls, if they don’t live there, and they will be delighted to have the work. Now you have experienced stagehands at a very reasonable rate, and they have their own workman’s comp too. What is most important in all the labor scenarios, beyond all else, is having crew that work forwards, and not have a crew member that drags the rest backwards by making mistakes or bringing a bad attitude to the job site.

Sourcing and staffing AV is an important decision in the production of a meeting and its associated special events. The decision of which venues to select is the first point where AV needs to be factored in. In larger or multiday meetings it is not uncommon for the main stage production budget to exceed $100,000, so the ability to capture 10% in savings or reduce risk of a glitch impacting the presentations is important. Keeping an eye on this ball will help planners create and operate more successful meetings and special events.