More than 400 Black meeting pros from across the country visited Greater Birmingham for the 41st edition of the conference, which emphasized a theme of strength and resilience.
Article written by Malik Anderson and published at SmartMeetings.com.
National Coalition of Black Meeting Professionals (NCBMP) held its 41st annual convention in Birmingham, Alabama, at Sheraton Birmingham Hotel and Westin Birmingham Hotel Nov. 13-16.
This year’s theme, Strength and Resilience, was an acknowledgement that the 2024 elections and the resulting shifts in DEI legislation would engender tension among attendees, says Jason Dunn, CEO at NCBMP. “We knew that a lot of our members were facing that [tension] internally, so we wanted to inspire them to find the inner strength to keep fighting and not to give up, to keep proving themselves and not to be dismayed,” Dunn says.
In addition to going behind-the-scenes of this year’s NCBMP, we also take a look at several of the sessions of which more than 400 attendees took part.
Historical Beginnings
The event’s opening night took place at 16th St. Baptist Church in Birmingham, the site of a bombing by members of the KKK, on Sept. 15, 1963, which injured 14 people and caused the deaths of four adolescent girls. Those who spoke at the event included the sister of one of those girls and the brother of one of the surviving victims, in addition to the church’s pastor, Reverend Arthur Price, Jr.
What followed from the moment attendees sat down in the church was a history lesson and the formation of a connection to the city, not only through the retelling of an unforgettable moment in history, but through sitting in the pews next right next to the place the bombing occurred and listening to those who have a direct connection with that history.
“We wanted to remind people that, unfortunately, hate is real and it’s not some mythical occurrence that happened in a book. This really happened,” Dunn says. “It awakens the consciousness of individuals to remember that some of these organizations were created because some people could not gain entry into other organizations. It also reinstates the spiritual power of forgiveness and the strength that lies within us.
“When you’re on one accord with others in that church, you have no other choice but to remember; to walk in the shoes of those who came to praise, worship and find faith.”
Dunn wanted attendees to live in that moment and show them that although hate is out there, they can prevail. “Your inner strength and faith in the human spirit will drive and continue to push you to find common ways to push past the hate, but also find the courage that our ancestors and descendants had to make things right.”
The Sessions
Over the next couple of days, attendees would be able to further their cultural and event industry education through insightful general sessions and breakouts.
Dr. Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., presented the opening session on the following day at Sheraton Birmingham. His discussion, “We Are the Leaders We’ve Been Looking For,” was a deep reflection of the issues of race and inequality in the United States. Quoting American writer James Baldwin throughout, Glaude stated, “Baldwin is perhaps one of the most insightful American writers about the American project.”
After a heavy opening session, members and attendees headed to their respective breakout sessions. One of them, “Must Have Contract Clauses,” was led by attorney Joshua Grimes, who touched on the latest in contract negotiations, such as force majeure clause changes, F&B cost increases, security issues and new laws ahead.
The breakout was nearly an hour long, but one notable change made to force majeures that Grimes mentioned is the removal of the words “illegal,” “impossible,” “commercially impracticable” or “inadvisable.”
“Those words are gone from most hotel contracts,” he says. “You can negotiate it back in, but what’s the difference? Let’s look at Covid. If you want to cancel because it’s illegal or impossible to have your meeting, you must have the government say you cannot meet, or the hotel, vendor or convention center must be closed. Anything else is not going to be a force majeure. I’m not going to talk about the reasons for that, but it is a purposeful restriction on making it harder to cancel.”
Other sessions included discussions by Dr. Ruha Benjamin, titled “Reckoning with the Future of Technology & Society.” Benjamin discussed taking advantage of other types of AI: ancestral intelligence and abundant imagination, to stop looking without and begin searching within.
Yet, as we can’t fully pull away from technology, there were also sessions on how to better use the event tech we have at hand. One such session was “AI EventXcelerator” presented by PCMA. The interactive session taught participants about PCMA’s AI technology Spark.
Giving Back to the Younger Generation
Throughout the event, there were several sessions where NCBMP presented donations to high school students to purchase caps and gowns. There were also college-aged attendees at the event, who brought aspirations to work in hospitality, and their presence placed them right next to those with decades of experience in the industry.
For Dunn, the driver of including the younger generation is plain and simple: “I believe what people see is what they will be.”
He highlighted the rarity of seeing a person of color running a hotel, or working in any high-level capacity in hospitality: your CEOs, vice presidents, directors, etc. “We want [the younger generation] to see all the facets of hospitality in every category,” Dunn says. “To do that, we have to show it by inviting them to the conference. In addition, it’s our responsibility to give back to the schools, to ease some of the burdens, and show that we are investing in them. We want them to grow. So if you leave there and we’re paying for your caps and gowns to graduate as a student who’s in hospitality, that just tells you we got your back.”
In addition to donations, NCBMP also provides mentorship for these students. “Some of those students leave [the conference] with job opportunities for when they leave high school, if they don’t want to go to college,” Dunn says. For these opportunities, NCBMP partners with several large hotel companies like Marriott International, MGM International, Memphis Convention and Visitors Bureau, Visit Orlando, Oak View Group and more.
Dunn went on to say they want to battle the misperception that you have to go to school to make six figures or to work in hospitality. That isn’t the route Dunn took, nor is it the route many of NCBMP’s members and attendees took. “We wanted to show them the entry points, different perspectives and categories in the industry, and just keep them inspired…The various schools we work with, we’re going to have long-term relationships with them, not just for the week of the conference.”
Find more information about the work done by the Greater Birmingham Convention & Visitors Bureau’s Convention Sales Staff at inbirmingham.com/meetings.