The meaning of legacy for association events
The Hague & Partners Convention Bureau has released a white paper exploring the meaning of legacy in the context of global association and not-for-profit events. The key finding of the research is that legacy must be driven by the organisers, rather than by the destination.
The research found that for event legacy to be truly achieved, it must lie at the heart of an association or not-for-profit’s mission and strategy, rather than be limited to a specific event. It also revealed that although destinations facilitate conferences and events, providing relevant local support, they cannot drive the achievement of legacy. Instead, it is up to the associations and not-for-profits coming to a destination to define their own goals, needs, and desires.

The research goes on to highlight the fact that The Hague & Partners Convention Bureau believes that association events are powerful tools that can bring people together and bring about global change. Destinations facilitate this by creating the perfect physical place for people to gather. However, the creation and success of an event legacy program must start with the organiser’s goals and aspirations.
The research concludes by demonstrating that the destination’s role is to facilitate the event legacy process by providing the necessary tools, resources, and even financial support.
The research was conducted in two stages – quantitative research via a workshop with 11 leading international association conference professionals and quantitative survey data gathered from 70* event professionals from around the world.
The Hague & Partners Convention Bureau team will be available to explore the research in more detail at IMEX Frankfurt on stand E100.
The 70 surveyed event professionals can be broken down as:
– 64% in-house association PCOs
– 10% agency association PCOs
– 13% corporate conference planners
– 2% charity conference planners
– 11% other
The full white paper and research results can be downloaded from https://bit.ly/42PtNPL.