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Professional coordination for aesthetic success
THE CROWDS have all gone home, the sound and light engineers have
packed up, the stars have been driven back to their plush hotel
rooms, the sponsors have left satisfied, and the cleaners are
standing by to sweep the debris of the night away. The auditorium
is deserted-almost. There is one person left, hawk-eyed and
swivel-necked, checking to see that the show is really over. This
is the same person who was in this auditorium before the
beginning and simultaneously in ten different places, making sure
that the show got off to a smooth start, and stayed that way.
This is the invisible-and intangible-presence that made all the
parts of the event come together successfully.
``Event management is an all-time effort,'' says Rakhi Kankaria,
who, with her husband Sanjay, runs an event management company in
Hyderabad. ``You work endlessly. Right from the word go it's
absolutely continuous.'' But she is not complaining. In a field
such as event management, the highs come from the work. One has
to love it to do it. ``It's a 9 to 8 work day for us, sometimes
longer,'' says Rakhi.
Event management, as the name suggests, is all about planning and
executing events. The projects an event manager handles could
range from a large wedding reception to a multi-site product
launch, or a star-studded benefit gala. Some event management
companies handle only social events such as birthday parties and
weddings while others restrict their activity to one type of
corporate event-trade shows, for instance. The Kankarias,
however, have handled a wide range of corporate jobs including
airport openings, fashion shows and beauty pageants, and
newspaper launches, all over the country. ``The client usually
comes to us with a vague idea of what they want. From those
initial discussions, we work out a plan and give them a
proposal,'' explains Rakhi.
The complexity of the job ranges from designing and preparing the
stage backdrop for a press conference to the entire coordination
of a large entertainment event ``There is no such thing as a
`ready made' event,'' says Rakhi. ``Ninety per cent of our time
and effort goes into planning, and the rest is running around
making sure the plan works out.'' Organisational skills,
interpersonal skills and creativity are the foundation stones of
the job. ``You have to be able to deal with all levels of people,
right from the welder who fixes the flagpole to the sound
technician who makes the music come alive, to the performers who
draw the crowds,'' says Rakhi. And at the same time, you must be
able to create the right ambience through decor and stage
settings to make an event aesthetically successful.
All this coordinating obviously requires an eye for detail and
the ability to persuade people - from mechanics to artists - to
deliver on time. An event has many parts to it - booking dates,
venues and stars (if it is an entertainment event), advance and
post-publicity, printing of invitations and tickets, catering,
photography, security, seating arrangements, decorations and a
hundred other unclassifiable extras. The event manager is the
binding agent that brings all these parts together so that they
become a seamless whole. She must also be able to manage high
levels of stress, handle difficult and demanding people, and
often deliver at very short notice. Rakhi describes a recent
product launch which went from discussion to event in less than
three days. ``And you have to be able to handle it with
perfection, because your mileage comes from a satisfied
clientele.'' A satisfied client is a ``boon'' she says, as it is
only through the recommendations of appreciative clients that the
work grows.
In the West, many public relations consulting firms offer event
management as one of their services. Increasingly, though, event
management is becoming a stand alone, specialised field of
activity. SVL Narayan of Satyam Computers classifies event
management as a corporate communications activity, since so many
of the large events are sponsored by corporates. However, most
large companies do not have in-house event managers; rather, they
have a public relations person in charge of events, who then
coordinates with an event management firm.
How does one become an event manager? For starters, there are
practically no courses in the area, but a degree or diploma in
mass communication - better still, public relations - is a good
way to begin. Since event managers must deal directly or
indirectly with various media, it is important to gain an
understanding of that.
The best way to enter the field is to get some experience with an
event management firm as a trainee. Most small firms, and many of
the larger ones, however, are wary of taking on too many trainees
for fear of spawning competition. Alternatively, one can begin by
coordinating small events - the decorations and entertainment for
children's parties, for instance - and gradually work upward.
Rakhi too got her start doing birthday parties. ``After a few
months of doing this, my husband and I decided to shoot into a
field where there was not much competition, and where there
certainly was a niche to succeed,'' she says. They began five
years ago on a small scale - ``all I did was distribute pamphlets
close to where I lived, and before we knew it we were in
business.''
Now they employ 28 people and have a nationwide clientele. ``You
learn on the job. With every project, you are a show wiser,''
explains Rakhi. ``There are no special technical qualifications
one requires - you just have to work hard, with your heart and
mind.''
USHA RAMAN
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