Archive for the ‘Corporate Access Meetings’ Category

MeetMax CAM and FactSet.

MeetMax CAM has been delivering meeting data to FactSet for over a two months now – currently to a list of 25 large buyside firms- but we are about to expand this to a greater number.  We have more than 20 banks permissioning their buyside clients to receive their meeting records in order to get better visibility and higher attribution for their corporate and analyst meetings .   This was the first of several partnerships for direct feeds.  We are also live with themarkets.com.

MeetMax’s partnership with Factset enables specific details of corporate access meetings to appear on Buyside Factset terminals.  With no distracting work for the sales people or the sales assistants – it’s automatic, accurate and weekly.

MeetMax CAM was developed to help the sellside maintain the integrity of its corporate access data. The specifics of such services provided by a sell side firm to an asset manager are critical.  Many sell side applications are simply not designed to maintain the integrity and accuracy of the data (location, date, time, participants, meeting size) of the data for reporting purposes.  This is despite the fact that corporate access meetings are incredibly valuable. In fact, once you add in meetings with analysts, they are amongst the most valuable piece of sell side firm’s service offering.

The other valuable component – written research – is already widely distributed via buyside terminals like FactSet.

To illustrate the power CAM’s distribution arrangement with FactSet:   If a Portfolio Manager met with a management at Bank A’s conference in March 2010 this will appear on the Portfolio Manager’s FactSet terminal shortly after the event.

The PM looking at the stock may then do one of several things

  • Call Bank A’s analyst to get a current read on the stock
  • Call Bank A  to find out when management is in NYC any time soon
  • Call Bank A to place an order to buy the stock

Applications where this will appear in FactSet include a stock price chart and the company events page (this shows events for that stock in the last 6 months such as analyst days).

FactSet is a great partner for us as it is used by the buy side as a workbench. A PM is likely to get into his office and spend the next 12 hours in FactSet.  And constant exposure to corporate access meetings provided will only increase awareness for the banks providing them, improve their vote scores, and increase their revenues.

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Buyside Firms get organized tracking Corporate Access

I think 2010 will be the year when buyside firms really get organized about tracking their Corporate Access services from the sellside.   There are a few trends making this likely.

  • Critical mass.  After a few years of Wellington and SAC being the only guys driving this bus – there are now a sizeable number of buyside firms tracking what meetings they take so their traders can better figure out who to pay.  This further drives other firms to join the trend.
  • They are getting help with new and cheaper tools.  Voting tools used to be exotic – but they are getting simpler and cheaper – and powerful meeting tracker services act as vote support systems or ersatz vote systems.   These are now being marketed by many firms which is just raising the awareness on the buyside.
  • Corporate Access (and direct contact with analysts) gets ever more valuable – and guesswork is no longer a basis for buyside firms to allocate payment.

CAM is doing its part too.  We are the best way for brokers to report their meetings – by a long way.  In fact the only way to get into some of these buyside systems. Just doing our bit to help our sellside clients get paid.

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Billing is Going Online

This is the year that Voting Systems on the buyside are really going to accelerate in usage.

A lot of the original voting systems – Thomson Extel in particular – use a top down survey approach.  Meaning, as a PM, you vote on Bank X’s research out of 10, their Corporate Access out of 10.  You do not vote on specific meetings or ideas.  But buyside firms are finding it hard to trust this kind of vote – when their PMs are filling out the survey from memory.  They need data – and they know it.   They need to be able to run a simple league table that shows the number of meetings they have taken by bank.  Ideally weighted for meeting value.

Lots of firms will be there to provide such tools this year.  We are now live with FactSet as the first and are about to go live with themarkets.com.

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Is it time-consuming to schedule 1×1 meetings?

One of our clients has a new 1-on-1 coordinator scheduling meetings for an event happening at the end of the week. She called today to find out how to do the scheduling in MeetMax. Forty-five minutes later, she had all of her meetings scheduled: 61 attendees, 21 with meeting requests, 6 companies, 54 total meetings. Here’s how we did it:

  • Schedule requested meetings for the tier 1 attendees first, using a batch scheduler to make this process quick and simple.
  • Repeat for lower tiers of attendees, until it looks like there are no more fillable requests.
  • Then go through the list of unscheduled attendees, and use the information provided by the attendee, when they registered, to determine who is willing to participate in small group meetings. Schedule these meetings by combining attendees who have indicated similar levels of knowledge of the company with whom they will be meeting.
  • Continue this until you have scheduled all attendees and/or filled up the available timeslots for each company.
  • Review the rooms grid to make sure that the number of meetings in each timeslot does not exceed the available number of rooms. Adjust the schedules as necessary.

The secret to efficiently scheduling meetings: Collect information about each request (priority, preferred meeting size, knowledge of the subject) when the attendee registers.

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Matching Corporate Access Activity with Client Revenues

What to do if your Institutional Clients don’t pay you commensurate with the Corporate Access work you do for them?  This could be the biggest single question facing Sales Heads who we speak to all the time.

First – do you know which those Clients are?  Which means knowing precisely, for each of your Clients, what you have done for them.

Second – were the Clients aware of all that you had done for them?   The best assumption for this question is “no”.

Third – under-payers can then be classified as either a) we don’t value your services the way you think we do,  b) we do value your services and can pay more but you’ve never been the squeaky wheel, or c) we cannot or will not pay any more.

The last may mean dropping the Client – but a) and b) provide a clear path to the sales rep to talk to the Client about modifying the service mix and getting paid more.

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Invoicing for Corporate Access meetings

invoice

We realize that Corporate Access is a soft-dollar activity for the most part.  (Leaving out the considerable success of Gerson Lehrman, of course).   So invoices will never be sent out looking like this.

That does not mean that banks should forget about Invoicing.  

Institutional  clients are becoming ever more rigorous in  the voting processes they follow – driven by many factors.   A compliance need to justify how they direct commissions.   More sophisticated tools for managing their voting.  A desire perhaps, in these challenging times, to more accurately and generously reward their smaller sellside providers as the bulge bracket banks see their dominance eroded.

So while Institutional Clients develop what amount to sophisticated Purchasing and Accounts Payable departments, not all sellside firms have yet responded by developing equally sophisticated Accounts Receivable procedures.  And yet for any business, improving Accounts Receivable is often the easiest and quickest path to improving the cash flow.

Specifically, banks should be generating and delivering detailed reports for each and every Client that receives any kind of Corporate Access benefit – including Conference meetings, non-deal Roadshows, Company Visits, Conference Calls, Analyst lunches, Analyst Roadshows, Field Trips.   These reports need to be complete, accurate, detailed and timely.   They should be considered as if they were an invoice.  Sample.

Complete – every type of “billable” activity needs to be included.   Imagine if a wireless company didn’t invoice for calls made in Texas, or for those made on Tuesdays.  Activity not counted and reported is revenue left on the table.

Accurate – obvious errors are simply an invitation to a Client to discard the entire report.  The more that is done by hand, by busy salespeople, for example, or by copying and pasting data between systems – the greater the room for error.

Detailed – many Clients need full details on each meeting.  Who was there, was it a 1×1 or a group, where it was, what type of meeting it was, when did it start.   They need this to let the PM attribute the correct number of votes.  Without it, they will give the minimum number, or none at all.   Reports also need to be formatted in a way as to make Client processing as easy as possible.  

Timely – if the reports are not delivered on time, they may not be counted, or votes may be applied with minimal consideration.

These times demand that valuable services that are provided to Clients are fully compensated.  One component of that it to invoice for Corporate Access services – to show how serious you are about getting paid for it.

Friday, May 1st, 2009

Institutional equities – to build share, think like an Attorney.

Tracking all meetingsOne brighter spot for smaller sellside firms this year, is that there is a lot of institutional market share up for grabs.   Bear and Lehman and Merrill/BofA have opened up a sizeable chunk of share, and many hedge funds are reassessing their allocations to those  remaining bulge firms.

But smaller sellside firms will need to get organized qujickly if they want to take advantage of this opportunity.

A helpful starting point is to  think like an attorney.   Not litigiously (please) but in tracking billable hours.  That attorney phone call to discuss the project.  Is it free?  That lunch to review progress?    That piece of research?  No, no and no.   Attorneys are ruthless at keeping track of every possible billable minute.  If an associate doesn’t bill 50 hours a week, they are in trouble, and if they don’t track it, it isn’t billable.

Brokerage firms don’t bill for hours but they assuredly bill for activities.  Billable Activities – any and  all activities that a Client might give you a vote for.   These include Corporate access meetings, 1x1s, field trips, client visits, analyst visits, substantive analyst calls, lunches with industry experts, conference calls or video conferences.  What is not billable?  Sales calls, voicemails, emails.   

Which is why CRMs (customer relationship management) systems make such incredibly poor billing systems.   They mix billable and non-billable activities together, and they are also very poor at reporting.  Law firms don’t use their CRMs for billing, and attorneys generally don’t prepare the bills.  They discuss them with clients.  CRMs are one thing, billing systems another.

Likewise, brokerage firms need to track Billable Activities.  Ruthlessly.   And these billable activities need to find their way into a central “billing” system that tracks everything.  And report  it accurately Client by Client.   So that the salespeople can start negotiating their way to a bigger share of commissions – based on hard substantiated facts, and leaving nothing out.   

Many brokerage firms keep different activities in different systems.    Analysts use one tool to monitor phone calls with Clients. Roadshows are kept in another system.  Conferences another.   This is  not an obstacle – it can even be a good thing – and is not an excuse for inaction.   Because these different systems can be ported to a single billing and reporting system – without causing any change at all in how people work.

Friday, May 1st, 2009

 

 

About MeetMax

MeetMax is the leading registration systems for Companies look for Ease of Use, Functional Power, 1on1 Meetings, Easy to Customize to Meet your Exact Needs.
MeetMax improves marketing and attendance at Corporate events, and makes running them vastly more efficient.

Contacts

For more information on MeetMax:
Conferences & Corporate Events - 518-691-0442 or email meetings@twst.com
Financial Conferences and Roadshows- 212-952-1600 or email corporateaccess@twst.com