SAE 2004 World Congress Recap
WARRENDALE, Pa.,
March 19 /PRNewswire/ -- The SAE 2004 World Congress attendance
was a success story of quality vs. quantity. Ford's Phil Martens
says the energy was up, feedback from many of the exhibitors is
great, the four day event featured an all-time high number of presentations,
and SAE professional development programs at Detroit's Cobo Center
during World Congress week shattered all previous attendance records.
For the first
time the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE International) was
able to verify attendance with great precision, using bar codes
and a database that eliminated any no-shows and double entries.
The official attendance for the four day event was 35,392. More
than 20% of those attendees were from outside the U.S., a telling
statistic about the global nature of automotive engineering and
the auto industry today.
For the first
time ever, Asia was the leading source of overseas visitors to the
World Congress. Europe, the traditional number two source of SAE
World Congress visitors after the U.S., was right behind Asia. The
largest increases in Asian attendance were from South Korea and
China, representing two of the fastest-growing global automotive
marketplaces.
The most important
barometer for the organizers is the qualitative data. This year's
totals showed a significant reduction in the number of exhibitor
personnel registered. This, says SAE Director of Automotive Business
Dave Amati, is a good trend. "When you break the numbers down
at an event like the SAE World Congress, you're going to see both
sides of the business equation. A few years ago, we saw too many
sellers in the mix, and we knew that for the event to have the value
it needed there needed to be a much better balance."
While the percentage
of OEM and top tier supplier employee attendees tracked similarly
to 2003, the percentage of "decision maker" attendees
- those with job titles of Vice President and above - was 12% of
the total number.
"We had
a good show this year, and I liked the diversity of the audience.
The global diversity that this show attracts is excellent, adds
Brandon Dent, Senior Manager, Corporate Affairs and Communications
for Yazaki Corporation. "Yazaki is a global company that does
business on many fronts, so diversity is a good thing for us. This
year the company went with an environmental theme in our exhibit,
and we found that this theme struck a positive note with many of
the engineers and executives with whom we conducted business during
the week."
Dana Corporation
had a large presence at SAE 2004 World Congress. Dana celebrated
its 100th Anniversary by sponsoring the Dana Technical Innovation
Forum and by putting up a large technology display directly in front
of it.
"The SAE
World Congress was a great opportunity to launch our 100th anniversary
and do business with the customers and industry leaders we needed
to see this week," said Gary Corrigan, V.P. of Corporate Communications
for Dana. "Dana is all about technology and customers and that
is why we sponsored the Dana Innovation Theater and the SAE bookstore.
We want to advance the science of mobility in our industry and SAE
this year allowed us to successfully do it."
The popular
Technology Theater, sponsored by AVL, attracted 80 senior executives
during the four days at Cobo, including 17 CEOs. The OEMs and top
30 supplier companies presented significantly higher number of papers
this year, validating SAE efforts to obtain more participation from
the manufacturers.
For the latest
information about the SAE 2004 World Congress, see the web page
http://www.sae.org/congress
.
SAE is a non-profit
engineering and scientific organization dedicated to the advancement
of mobility technology to better serve humanity. Nearly 84,000 engineers
and scientists who are SAE members develop technical information
on all forms of self-propelled vehicles, including automobiles,
aircraft, aerospace craft, trucks, buses, marine, rail and transit
machinery. This information is disseminated through SAE meetings,
books, electronic products and databases, technical papers, standards,
reports, and professional development programs.
Source:
SAE International
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