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Palm Springs Photo Festival
In an intimate setting in Palm Springs, California, hundreds of new and established photographers meet for a week and learn from their peers, industry leaders, educators and master photographers. And to ensure that events run smoothly, the Palm Springs Photo Festival created a conference registration system with bar-coded tags.
Business Challenge
The organizers of the Palm Springs Photo Festival faced several
challenges. Palm Springs is low and spread out meaning that
Festival events took place in different venues across town. That in
turn created the need to track the attendees, their classes and
lectures, their meals and meetings, and ensure that the right
person was in the right place in front of the right mentor, and
with the right boxed lunch at the right time.
Jeff told the magazine that he’d visited a friend who
owned a spectacular Moroccan-style hotel called Korakia Pensione in
Palm Springs. Dunas said he thought it would be the perfect
location for the festival. “It’s very
accessible to a huge population,” he told
“Double Exposure” adding “and you can
get around on foot—you don’t even need a
car.”
But with the setting came the challenge. Hordes of people moving
from one area to another, the delivery of boxed lunches to the
attendees and participants at the right place at the right time.
And it didn’t stop there – attendees
weren’t only going from symposia to seminars –
there were also vitally important peer reviews of their work
– a whopping 505 portfolio reviews in 4 days.
The festival is the brainchild of Jeff Dunas, a renowned
photographer who had attended many such photographic events in
other places. But he said, there was nothing quite like it in the
United States. “The idea came to me in the early
’90s,” he told the online magazine
“Double Exposure” last year. “I had
been attending the Rencontres d’Arles Photo Festival in
France every year since 1986, and I always thought that it would be
interesting to have a kind of adapted version of this event in
America,” he explained. “But it really
didn’t exist. I kept thinking that somebody would do it,
but no one ever did.”
Successful Solution
To solve the logistics and delivery challenges, designer Henry
McLaughlin created a system of bar-coded attendance
badges which were scanned at every venue. Using the data
collected by a third party vendor who organized the conference
registration, Henry created a custom database which eventually
contained some 6000 records, The system was deployed on laptops so
that badges could be scanned at the different venues. For Jeff, who describes Henry’s system as
“simple and elegant,” the FileMaker application
had another benefit. The ease with which attendees could be tracked
meant that he could grow the festival. “We could never
have managed the number of people we served without our FileMaker
barcode system,” Jeff enthused. “Our revenue
doubled and our customer satisfaction increased, and a large part
of that picture was our FileMaker system."
Other FileMaker features including PDFMaker also came into play
says Jeff. “It also allowed us to re-print bar-code
badges if there was a printer jam or another problem. This was very
helpful in managing the hundreds of badges printed on a half-dozen
different types of badge-blanks."
Customer Benefits
Jeff was clearly delighted that the features in FileMaker Pro 9
could smooth out the Festival’s rough edges
from the previous year. As he explains, deploying Henry’s
FileMaker solution was a quantum leap forward. “Our customers greatly benefited during our portfolio
review process,” he recalls. “Last year we used
a whiteboard showing the time slots available for reviews, staff
would then hand-write the reservations into the slots and
hole-punch the attendee's badge. It was a time-consuming
and confusing process, which created a lot of anxiety on the part
of both our attendees and staff alike. Now it is all handled via a
barcode scan and shows up on a monitor like a smoothly running
train schedule.” Next year Jeff has plans to expand again with a database to
track attendees, their lodging, transportation, equipment, the
reviewers’ timeslots and instructor schedules.
“If time and budget permit,” he says,
“we'd also like a simple system to track a very
small volume of sales of items like books, T-shirts and
hats.”
And there’s more! The Palm Springs Photo Festival also
intends to deploy a contact/equipment/scheduling database for its
staff via the web. And, adds Jeff, the 2.0 enhancements to the
system for next year also “include using a sound file
container field to give a 'Welcome' or
'There is a problem' message while scanning
attendees into seminars, thus freeing the laptop operator from
looking at the screen while they let people in.” In the
true spirit of ubiquity Jeff also hopes to use broadband wireless
connectivity so that the system can be most easily accessed.
“We could never have managed the number of people we served without our FileMaker barcode system. Our revenue doubled and our customer satisfaction increased and a large part of that picture was our FileMaker system.”
Jeff Dunas --- Founder, Palm Springs Photo Festival
Contact information
Contact Info for Customer:Jeff Dunas
Founder
Palm Springs Photo Festival
800-928-8314
jeff@palmspringsphotofestival.com
www.palmspringsphotofestival.com
Filemaker Contact:
Kevin Mallon
Public Relations Manager
FileMaker Inc.
408-987-7227
kevin_mallon@filemaker.com
http://www.filemaker.com
- Annual photographic workshop and conference for several hundred attendees
- Palm Springs, California
- Seamlessly manages and provides the courses, lectures and meals needed by several hundred attendees
- Creative Services
- Creative Markets
- FileMaker Pro 9 deployed on laptops across Palm Springs, CA
- From a white board to a digital scheduling process – a smoother and more failsafe system for both lecturers and attendees
- Using bar codes, meals were delivered to the right attendee in the right place