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Production at One Thing Conference ...

Over Christmas and New Year Resource Group was busy preparing for the One Thing Conference
for iHOPKC in Kansas City. This was their largest conference with 37,000 registrations.
Set up was extensive and started back on Dec 21st with a pre load and rig set up unloading
10 semis of equipment on the first day.

Load in at One Thing

Over the next 6 days the Kansas City Convention Center was transformed from grey concrete
to a conference ready for tens of thousands of people.

Setup at onething

The final touches being all the drapes hung from the ceilings, carpeting and house lights over
1200ft of floor space. The center is almost 300t wide and 1200ft long with lighting trusses
down the center of the whole venue and multiple Line arrays combined with 12k Christie HD
video projectors to provide the final show and event look and feel for the week of One Thing 2013.

One Thing Conference

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Resource Group AV using graphical ...

Marketing changes – new staff and new ideas. You will start to see a lot more poster and pictorial ads about Resource Group AV, based on events that we have produced some recently and some over the last few years.

The idea behind the pictures was decided upon as a way to let prospective clients see the range and scope of projects that Resource Group AV has previously done and what they can do in the future.

This weekend launched the graphic below on Facebook, Twitter and Linkedin. The picture was one of a series taken at Chicago All State Arena, and shows the most moving lights up to that time, with 800 movers over the stage and over the floor area of the arena.

Stephen Brown
Production Director
Tel: 863 701 2010

Resource Group AV call me grphic

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How much do you know ...

What do you know? Take the test.

Whatever level of experience you have in the AV field, technicians and engineers are always learning each day about new technology, as well as great tips and tricks to save time on setup and what works best with this or that piece of equipment.

But how many of the AV engineers that we know, actually sit down and prepare for exams on AV?  A lot of the time, experience is passed down first hand on the job, or in the office, or warehouse during QC and prep for events.

I am all for education. I enjoy reading about new technology but its also good to evaluate what you think you know, and then if there are any areas you need to revise, you can focus on getting that area of expertise up to standard too.

infocomm internationalI was on InfoComm International site this week and found a number of quick written tests you can download and take, to see how much you have learned so far, and see where you need to improve. Answers are at the back of the test – but don’t look until you’ve finished.

Here is their website Infocomm International-self-assement you can scroll down and see 8 practice exams to test how much you do or don’t know.
Take your time, some of the questions will make you think.

Here is the link to download  the Certificate Preparation Pretest Essentials.pdf try it and see how you do.

Steve

 

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5 tips on event planning

Planning creative events takes time, preparation and sometimes help from outside people. Creative events are the key words, because everybody knows the basics start with who, what, where, why, when? Fortunately there are people who want to help you succeed and are already waiting to help you.

a. Every venue has its own Event Management Team. Utilize their experience to gain ideas of what is possible in their rooms, what can be flown, weight limits, sizes, have they done “x” before, etc. They see hundreds of shows and events come and go through their properties every year and they will have a good idea of space allocation and seating styles that can work in their rooms.

In a Convention Center over New Year recently one of the Event Managers was able to show our production crew an easy way to run fiber optic cables 350ft underground into the middle of the audience. We had been wondering how do we get the cable there without flying it and then dropping it to the ground, or having to put it in cable ramps. The Event Manager saved both time and money by knowing her facility.

b. Set a realistic budget to spend on the event that includes the ideas you want for the AV. You can not produce a superbowl size event on $60,000 production costs. Develop relationships with AV vendors and ask them their thoughts on costs. If you are in a city with a strong union labor workforce, you need to allocate additional costs of stage hands, loaders, minimum hours, etc.

c. When designing a creative event, meet with your AV supplier and ask for their opinion, thoughts and ideas that they may have. AV companies don’t expect planners to be up-to-date on every piece of gear available, but as industry leaders of technology, we know what equipment is best suited for different events, sizes, performance and can help you put structure to your design.

d. If the client really needs something so different and unusual – hire a set designer who will work with your budget to design a showcase event for you with all the elements of audio, lighting and video. (From my experience they hate the logistics of event planning and only want to be designers) They can draw layouts and specify equipment in conjunction with production management, LD’s, video directors and Audio engineers.

e. If you like a particular AV vendor ask them about traveling to your next event and what costs are involved to do that. Most AV companies travel and after working with you on a couple of events get to know what you are looking for, before you ask. I work with numerous clients that use our company from coast to coast, because they like our service, design and we have a track record of producing successful events even when the parameters of the event change dramatically. Like when a client double booked a show back to back with a national rock concert that took an extra 8 hours longer to unload and we had to load in through the night. The event the next day was seamless and the audience never knew there had been a problem.

Steve Brown Production Director @ Resource Group AV.

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Using Wifi in Production

Wifi_web_20_stickerMost people have become used to going to Hotels and having wifi available in their rooms, in the lobby, restaurants, etc., and share videos, games to their friends.
But in the meeting space area’s in hotels, this is something that the hotel locks down and there is usually a charge for. So if you have a presenter as I had recently that decided last-minute that they wanted to show an excerpt from YouTube as part of their presentation, they were unable to do it over wifi.
However, we always test presenters computers that they insist on using with our systems, so we had a little warning and they were able to use software to pull the video onto their hard drive and then play back the excerpt of the drive.

Planning ahead and always asking both the client and presenters their needs including presenters needs for playback, stops last-minute panics and having to jump through hoops to make the presentation work.

Always ask the hotel what their policy is for wifi in meeting space and especially ballroom where you may want to have enough bandwidth available for people to sign on and use live twitter and Facebook posts.

 

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