Posts Tagged ‘Five-Star conferences’
28th January
2011
- Among those who took to the podium, the World Economic Forum at Davos was the leading executive speaking platform for industry-leading CEOs.
- The World Economic Forum was followed by the Clinton Global Initiative among our list of Five-Star conferences in 2010. Other forums are below.
| Industry-Leading CEOs’ Top ThreeExecutive Speaking Engagement Venues in 2010 |
| (1) World Economic Forum at Davos |
| (2) Clinton Global Initiative |
| (3) Fortune Most Powerful Women Summit (tie) |
| (3) The Wall Street Journal CEO Council (tie) |
| Other Events: (alphabetical order) Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy’s (CECP) Board of Boards, Chief Executives Club of Boston, Milken Institute Global Conference, National Press Club, Wharton Leadership |
- The global economy and outlook was the leading topic for industry-leading CEOs who participated in these events. Other themes included education, gender equality and company- or issue-specific opportunities. What will top executives talk about throughout 2011 if the economy recovers.....perhaps they will focus on their positioning and differentiation and corporate responsibility will rise again in popularity (it has slowed we think). I did hear that regional forums on corporate responsibility are increasing.
25th January
2011
Yesterday we released our analysis on where industry-leading CEOs and the most powerful women in business invested their time speaking in 2010. Reputations can be shaped at such top-tier events and company stories can travel the world, if properly socialized. We used to depend on media coverage to get the message out about a speaking platform but with social media at our fingertips today, a speech before 50 people can travel fast to many more influential people than ever imagined. If companies can properly distribute their executives' speech-making online, they can now realize an even healthier ROI for their executives' time than ever before. And let's not forget how much time, resources and energy goes into just one speech or presentation. It is never a walk in the park!
I am going to blog backwards about our findings by starting with what we learned about the most powerful women in business first and get to the industry-leading CEOs later this week. Like we had in grade school, today is backwards day.
I am quite pleased that we decided to look at the most powerful women in business because this is a small, exclusive club that demands further research in the communications field. Greater demand for female leaders was recently underscored when we learned that the World Economic Forum now requests that 20 percent of this year’s strategic partnership delegates be female. That polite request is sure making the rounds because I see it popping up all over. Despite the small sample size of these most powerful women (alas!), we did learn some interesting trends about what they've been doing on the speaking circuit over the past 12 months. And they've been busy. Here are some snippets from our analysis:
- This elite group of powerful business women was extremely active on the speaking circuit in 2010. A large eight out of 10 (82 percent) spoke at one or more events in 2010.
- In addition, the average number of events that each woman spoke at in 2010 was 3.2 events, with 11 women having spoken at five or more events.
- The leading speaking forums in 2010 for the most powerful women executives included the World Economic Forum, Fortune Brainstorm: Tech, the Women’s Conference (hosted by former California First Lady Maria Shriver and Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger), Daily Beast’s Women in the World, and not surprisingly, Fortune’s Most Powerful Women Summit (although not everyone who makes the list is a speaker). However, there was also a wide range of other types of conferences where top women in business spoke such as Business for Social Responsibility (BSR) Annual Conference, Committee Encouraging Corporate Philanthropy (CECP) Board of Boards, Milken Institute Global Conference, and The Wall Street Journal CEO Council. Micho Spring, our chair of the Global Corporate practice at Weber Shandwick said: “The vast majority of these women leaders are taking their communications and storytelling roles seriously. There are not only many women’s conferences for female leaders, but many other non-gender specific platforms as well.”
- Leading women executives are out in force. This is quite a broad range which shows that there is demand for these top executives. The types of conferences can be categorized as follows:
| Types of Speaking Engagement Venues Most Powerful Women in Business Spoke in 2010 |
| Industry Events (50%) |
| Women’s Leadership Events (43%) |
| Academic Events (40%) |
| Five-Star* Events (35%) |
| Function-Specific (18%) (i.e., ANA Masters of Marketing, NACD Directorship Forum) |



