Leadking
Contributor
Thanks Lee. As always, you provide great professional input. I am dying to know.....what to YOU think about the apparent difficulty DEMA is having getting the "big boys" to attend the show? Is this purely an economic decision for the manufacturers, or are we seeing the decline of DEMA? From your spot on the sunny beaches of retirement, what changes do YOU think should now be made in the organization?
Phil Ellis
Discount Scuba Gear at DiveSports.com - Buy Scuba Diving Equipment & Snorkeling Equipment
In my opinion (I have lots) this has been in the making for years. I left DEMA out of frustration 10 years ago.(WARNING DIATRIBE AHEAD, contains both truth and opinion)
The roots of all this go back to just before I became DEMA president. The travel segment was revolting and threatening to start their own show. They felt they had no input into the trade show. A group was put together to try to figure out a way to bring the various stakeholder groups (travel, education, retail & publishing) into DEMA. The manufacturers' felt that it (DEMA) was created and developed by them and was worth a considerable sum of money and wanted a "buy-in" of sorts.
We negotiated with the group and formulated a plan where each stakeholder group got two seats on the Board of Directors (BOD) and the Manufacturers kept their nine seats. The retailer and travel group said they could bring massive numbers of their groups(s) in and it would generate over $1.3 million in additional annual funding to be used to promote the industry as their buy-in. If this happened, all groups, including the manufacturers, would have two seats on the Board.
I was president when all this went down and my life turned into hell after that. Every Board meeting turned into a debate about the "unfairness" of nine mfg. members to eight stakeholder members and the manufacturers where still calling the shots. I always responded that the bylaws called for the $1.3 million annually and then we could vote for two stakeholders from each group (equal representation). I fought this battle for four years until I left the Board. The next meeting the manufacturers capitulated and the Manufacturers lost control of the Board and DEMA got NOTHING for it.
Roll this forward a number of years and DEMA moves the show to the fall, again to appease the travel segment. This was the beginning of the end. My research on the trade show committee convinced me that most retailers are still trying to figure out how their season performed, or are still finishing out the season, or hunkering down cash wise for the long cold winter. The travel segment is convinced that a fall show will generate additional bookings for the winter. Between the fiasco of going a year without a trade show (never let the customers know they can live without you), to the Houston debacle, and then Orlando back to back. The poor management decisions kept compounding the problem.
My opinion is that the travel industry would like to open the show to the public so that they can by-pass the retail stores and book direct. All this said, it is my opinion that the dedicated dive retailer is an endangered species. I foresee the day when dive stores will roll back up into the sporting goods stores from which they came. The overhead to run a dive store crushing them into submission.
I got involved with DEMA in the early 1990's as I saw a demographic wall coming at us and sought to find a way to go over it. I failed! It is a great personal disappointment to me. During my DEMA years I spent more time and energy on it than I did on my own business and I failed to convince the industry of the problems ahead.
It's not a pretty picture. This has been a long time coming and I hate to say it, but I told you so.
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