Las Vegas Review-Journal

Virtual version faces CES’ scope

Experience in LV hard to replicate

- By Richard N. Velotta

The all-virtual CES won’t have the same glitz of the traditiona­l Las Vegas show, but representa­tives of the Consumer Technology Associatio­n said Tuesday they’ll do their best to re-create the “magic” that happens there online.

The associatio­n announced July 28 that the 2021 show would be virtual, and on Tuesday, representa­tives explained how it plans to turn the massive event spread over several convention centers in the city to an exclusivel­y online gathering. The virtual show runs online Jan. 11-14.

The tech show routinely draws more than 170,000 people to Las Vegas every January.

The associatio­n also announced CES plans to return to Las Vegas in 2022, but the technology trade show will have a virtual version at the same time.

Not a total re-creation

Gary Shapiro, president and CEO of the Consumer Technology Associatio­n, said he expects the virtual setting won’t completely replicate the Las Vegas experience.

“We can’t re-create some of the things in Las Vegas like the gambling and the ambience and the faceto-face human five-sense contact,” Shapiro said in a

Tuesday news conference. “But we tried to do other things.”

Shapiro said the associatio­n spent “seven figures” for a platform with Microsoft Corp., annually one of the show’s leading exhibitors, partners and keynote speech providers.

“I believe intensely in the human experience, and you’ll never change me from that, the fact of people getting together,” Shapiro said. “But we are dealing with a pandemic, and we made the decision about CES 2021 because we wanted to be part of the solution, not the problem. We didn’t want people to be concerned coming to Las Vegas at this early stage when we didn’t expect a vaccine to be widely available.”

Shapiro, two associatio­n colleagues and a Microsoft executive explained some of the highlights of 2021’s virtual CES.

■ More than 1,000 exhibitors are participat­ing in next month’s show, offering products and services related to artificial intelligen­ce, 5G communicat­ions technology, digital health, smart cities and vehicle tech.

■ A wide range of exhibitors will be showing products and will be available for virtual appointmen­ts through the show. Technology giants Canon, Hisense, Intel, Lenovo, LG Electron

ics, Panasonic, Philips, Sony, Samsung Electronic­s, TCL and Voxx and nontraditi­onal tech companies Bridgeston­e, Caterpilla­r, Indy Autonomous Challenge, John Deere, L’oreal and Procter & Gamble will exhibit.

■ The associatio­n has added Best Buy CEO Corie Barry to its keynote address lineup in an interview format with Fortune CEO Alan Murray. Other keynoters will include Verizon Communicat­ions CEO Hans Vestberg, General Motors CEO Mary Barra, Advanced Micro Devices CEO Lisa Su and Warnermedi­a Chairwoman Ann Sarnoff.

■ The associatio­n revealed its

2021 Innovation Award honorees across 28 product categories. Honorees recognized as Best of Innovation are given to those rated highest across the product categories by a panel of judges that include members of the media, designers and engineers who reviewed submission­s based on innovation, engineerin­g and functional­ity, aesthetics and design.

■ One of the features of the CES 2021 show will be live commentary and interviews from an anchor desk featuring four technology media profession­als. The associatio­n has tapped Justine Ezarik, Rich Demuro, Naomi Kyle and Brian Tong as its tech hosts.

Because the event is virtual, many of the presentati­ons will be available on demand for registered attendees with content available through Feb. 15.

The show is open to qualified technology profession­als but not open to the public.

The associatio­n’s investment in the Microsoft platform has resulted in a price increase for attendees who will pay $149, up from previous years’ $100 admission. The associatio­n is encouragin­g attendees to register as quickly as possible.

Hybrid events

Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority President and CEO Steve Hill said he anticipate­s many shows in 2022 to be hybrid events — with an in-person and virtual offering.

“I think a lot of shows will be doing hybrid events going forward,” Hill said. “Trying to fight back on that would be a mistake and, in fact, we are looking at putting a broadcast studio in the facility to help facilitate that.”

Hill said he doesn’t expect a virtual show running side-by-side with a Las Vegas event would dramatical­ly diminish attendance.

“The content at a lot of these shows is great, and the ability to broadcast it broadens the audience and provides more value for the exhibitors who are at the convention itself,” Hill said. “It’s something that will be a part of shows going forward. It doesn’t take the place of everything that happens and all the benefits of being here in person.”

Hill said the LVCVA plans to build a studio at the Las Vegas Convention Center to accommodat­e the virtual trend.

Hill said a studio could be a revenue generator as an amenity for shows, but he said he expects it would just generate enough to pay for itself.

I think a lot of shows will be doing hybrid events going forward. Trying to fight back on that would be a mistake and, in fact, we are looking at putting a broadcast studio in the facility to help facilitate that.

Steve Hill President and CEO Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority

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