CES 2021 is going to be a very different affair. The biggest tech trade show, which typically takes place every January in Las Vegas, has been forced to go digital this year, thanks to the coronavirus.
Normally, CES is a huge physical event with exhibits sprawling across 2.9 million net square feet of space. Last years event attracted 171,268 attendees, including 6,517 members of the media. This year, the online-only event will be smaller, with perhaps 1,000 exhibitors and maybe 150,000 attendees, according to Gary Shapiro, who is CEO of the Consumer Technology Association, which hosts CES. Those numbers are not so bad in many ways, as they would still qualify as a huge digital experience. And more people who never had access to CES will be coming for the first time, boosting the shows international numbers, Shapiro said in an interview. More than 100,000 people are already registered.
But its going to be a weird event. No doubt about that. I spoke with Shapiro about it during our usual preshow interview. He said the CTA had to make some agonizing decisions in the transition to digital, as the big conference or lack of it wont create nearly as many jobs in Las Vegas as in past years. He said his confidence in an in-person event in January 2022 is growing, especially with the progress on vaccines. But the CTA had to shut down the physical side of CES 2021 and announced in July that it would move ahead with the digital-only format for the show, which starts on January 11 and runs for four days. The event will have a media day, as well as 100 hours of programming, albeit with sessions that are shorter than usual. (Im hosting a session on cloud computings progress during the pandemic).
As for hot technologies, Shapiro sees 5G broadband wireless networks taking off, 8K TVs, enterprise technologies, health tech, robotics, augmented reality and virtual reality, and drones. Sorting through it all to find the good stuff will probably be more challenging this year, but thats where the media can help.
On the political and regulatory front, Shapiro sees some black clouds. He thinks regulators are making a mistake in going after the crown jewels of technology companies. He said, Its catnip to the European regulators and others who want to hurt U.S. companies. A lot of U.S. employees, stockholders, pension funds rely on these companies. Theyre keeping the stock market aloft.
Heres an edited transcript of our interview.
Above: Gary Shapiro, CEO of the Consumer Technology Association, at CES 2020.
Image Credit: Dean Takahashi
VentureBeat: How is CES different this year? Its such a big change. How quickly did you have to make the decision to go virtual?
Gary Shapiro: Its so different that I expect we will never have to do it again. Or at least I hope so. Its given us this one-year window opportunity to try amazing things weve always wanted to do. Especially with the vaccine out, my confidence level for 2022 is growing. Weve already started selling that event early. We started in November. Were selling out halls already. There will be a physical event, and we also want to take the best and most effective things weve done digitally. Were calling 2022 a hybrid event.
But for 2021, without worrying about the physical event, weve been focusing exclusively on the digital event since July. We went to a two-track approach beginning in March. We made the announcement, as youre aware, in July, seven months ahead. We did it intentionally early to give everyone an opportunity to plan, so they could think about how they would express themselves in a digital venue, and also frankly so they could save some money. We decided there was no way there would be a widely available vaccine in time for CES, and so we felt the right thing to do was make the announcement and be part of the solution rather than the problem.
VentureBeat: I see youre over 1,000 exhibitors. Thats not as many as usual, but what was key to hanging on to everyone and making sure that some of those folks wouldnt just decide to skip a year?
Shapiro: Every company made its own decision. We offered everyone a refund if they wanted it, or credit toward next year. We were about as generous as we could possibly be. Weve incurred a lot of our own costs. But we did a lot of research early in the year. We were very lucky. We represent the technology industry, which has done very well for the most part. Anyone selling anything to the home, any service, has done well. And our show was in January, before COVID-19 hit the United States. We werent one of these events that had to pivot in three weeks before a cancellation. We had more time to think about it, focus on it, look at other peoples experiences.
Theres a lot of goodwill, because of COVID-19, throughout the business community. People are somewhat forgiving and understanding. But the COVID-19 experiences people have had, where avatars go from physical exhibit to physical exhibit on a screen, that was less than satisfactory for both the people investing in the exhibit and the people investing in attending. We had to do something different. We couldnt find anything off the shelf. We decided the only ones who were doing this right were the tech companies doing their own user events and application events.
Microsoft did an amazing job, and others as well. But they were the ones who had the highest satisfaction rate, the best attendance, and everything else. We have a long relationship with Microsoft, and theyre a member of ours. We decided we could create something and take advantage of the fact that they had Microsoft Teams, take advantage of their cloud. They have phenomenal production studios in Teams. Thats what this is. Its not building an exhibit and they will come. You produce something compelling, essentially a telethon for a few days, video productions, and things like that. Our exhibitors are doing the same. Talking to our keynotes, they get it. A lot of the big companies get it. But we also wanted to offer something to smaller companies, startups. Eureka Park has been phenomenal. Our entry-level offering offers a lot.
Were able to do things weve always wanted to do but weve never been able to do. We wanted to do the LinkedIn of events. When you register, you get the option to share your name with others. Thats already taken off. People are getting in contact, getting emails, linking up already. Before the show even starts, were feeling some satisfaction and success.
Another thing were doing, just about everyone who goes to CES says there isnt enough time to see everything they want to. Were giving show life for another 30 days afterward, where people will be able to see the exhibits, see the conferences, see the keynotes, even communicate with exhibitors if theyre interested and willing. Well also have a live aspect. A lot of the press conferences, 20-some press conferences, will allow Q&A periods for participation.
We want to make sure its still a very qualified audience, though. Thats why were urging press to register early because were afraid that if we get thousands of press trying to register in the last few days, we cant get them into the press conferences. Its the same with regular attendees.
Above: CES 2021 will be all virtual.
Image Credit: Dean Takahashi
VentureBeat: Im happy not to have to wait in line for the Samsung event anymore.
Shapiro: Were accessing some serious bandwidth to make sure peoples needs will be met along those lines. Were getting very significant registration. A lot of it, more than average, is from outside the United States. That serves another need. A lot of people historically want to go to the show from other countries, and they just cant. Now people are just registering. Its very exciting.
We also have the keyword search opportunity. You create your own customized experience, whatever youre interested in. At the same time, we tried to preserve serendipity, discovering things you didnt know about. In addition to relying on journalists, we have four of our own anchors that will be putting out highlights on things coming up. Its 24 hours a day. People access it from all over the world and see what they want to see, whether its in real time or after the show.
VentureBeat: How does the 150,000-attendee estimate come about?
Shapiro: Its our average number weve had the last few years. But we dont know. Its a guesstimate at best. We just dont know. Theres no other way to say it. Everyone expects us to give a number, so we did, but
VentureBeat: I just wondered if it was an indication based on registration so far.
Shapiro: No, the registration only opened less than three weeks ago. Usually, we open registration on September 1. Weve already had 100,000 preregistered in that time, though. Its not an apples to apples comparison, of course. If youre going to CES in a normal year, you have to invest in a hotel and airfare. Were reluctant to make any comparisons. And a lot of people who register early often dont go. Thats the case with any trade show. But what were trying to avoid, like I said, is last-minute registration. Thats a concern of ours.
VentureBeat: It sounds like youre getting a benefit in terms of an international audience, then. People who couldnt have come can attend now.
Shapiro: Every exhibitor gets a certain number of free registrations, but weve also offered our membership registrations. Were also offering the keynotes on social media for anyone. You dont have to be connected with the industry to watch the keynotes.
Above: CES 2020
Image Credit: Dean Takahashi
VentureBeat: Are you not as concerned about programming overlapping because theres the ability to watch later?
Shapiro: Thats still carefully choreographed because people want to watch breaking news live. Well have more than 100 hours of programming, but we dont want to have two drone sessions on at the same time, two of anything like that. I still think people want theres excitement in hearing about it for the first time. Now a lot of the programming may not be live because were dealing with panels and things like that. But certainly, some of it will be.
VentureBeat: I feel badly for Las Vegas itself. It has to be a huge blow.
Shapiro: We did two press conferences this week, one for Asia and the West Coast and one for Europe and the rest of the U.S. The late-night Asia one, they asked me what was most difficult, and I gave a lengthy answer. It was probably too long. But I came back to it later and said that honestly, the toughest thing for us was all the people in Las Vegas who look forward to CES to kick off the year. The calls we made in July before we went public were very difficult. I feel for them so much.
Were still supporting local charities there. Were making contributions to the big Las Vegas food bank and have done other things weve tried in the past to support them. As different and exciting as 2021 may be, were looking forward to a physical CES in 2022. We look forward to seeing people and looking them in the eye. We may still be wearing masks, but Im confident well figure it out one way or another.
VentureBeat: In what other ways has this become more difficult? What are the toughest decisions youve had to make in this transition?
Shapiro: Well, theres the financial impact. Im not going to lie. We had to cut back our spending. Were a smaller staff now. We had to learn new skills. We had to reimagine CES. It was a great exercise, and weve come up with some cool, exciting things that no one else has done before. Were excited about it.
But weve gotten good at producing a large physical event, and there are certain rhythms that were used to. Some things its just an ah-ha moment. For example, we changed the dates of the show. Normally I wouldnt be able to change the dates of the show for eight years from now. I can tell you what theyll be. But five months out, we pushed it forward a week, more into January. A lot of that time is for post-production. People have to be uploading stuff. We felt they needed that extra week after the holidays.
Its different in many, many ways. On the other hand, a lot of the things Im usually worried about at this time of year, Im not worried about them. Wed be talking about how to survey our attendees, journalists, and exhibitors after the show. We dont have to ask about how their trip went, what the hotel was like. The opportunities are huge. Theres a lot of goodwill. But I dont want to oversell it. Youre still sitting at home in front of a screen. Weve had to cut down the time for panels considerably. Usually, its an hour standard, and now its 30 minutes.
Above: AMD CEO Lisa Su shows off a Ryzen 4000 laptop processor at CES 2020.
Image Credit: Dean Takahashi
VentureBeat: Its interesting that you can show how innovation hasnt stopped. Companies are still creating and launching new things.
Shapiro: Its huge. Were talking to companies that are really jazzed up. The keynoters are excited. They have stuff they want to announce. Just today, we announced another keynoter weve never had before, Doug McMillon, the CEO of Walmart. This week, we announced Ann Sarnoff from Warner Media. We have more announcements coming. Getting people to speak and participate is exciting. The live anchor guests will also be interviewing a lot of people who are relevant to the industry. Weve never had that before.
VentureBeat: What categories do you foresee being hot or interesting?
Shapiro: Weve been talking about resilience for a few years. Weve had areas of the show on smart cities. Next-generation television, theres a lot of excitement in broadcasting and more excitement than I expected from TV manufacturers. The TV world has something new, and they want to get it out to the world. People are cord-cutting, and so the over-the-air broadcast crowd, this helps out. Its free, and it can do a lot.
Obviously, 5G is huge. We have the CEO of Verizon, Hans Vestberg. Theres a lot about the 5G infrastructure thats becoming so much more important than anyone realized. We need broadband, and we need it across everything. Mobility, we have Mary Barra from GM. Theres the focus on electric cars and the focus on self-driving. We have the major car companies participating again. If youre an infrastructure supplier in the auto industry, this gives you a real opportunity to shine. Then theres robotics, AR and VR, drones. I have to mention health tech.
Industry sales are up significantly in 2020 because people needed tech for education, for working from home. Theyre buying all sorts of things. Video games are off the charts. All sorts of things have jumped. 5G phones have jumped. 8K televisions hit almost a million units this year, and even more next year. 4K is incredible. Theres so much out there thats had to change because of COVID-19. Companies now have the opportunity to talk about whats different. Every company has something different because of COVID-19. The other side is looking at supply chain issues. Thats become a challenge for companies. But its created new opportunities in sourcing.
Above: Sign at CES 2019.
Image Credit: Dean Takahashi
Theres always more news out there. A lot of people are on pins and needles as to whether the president will put tariffs on products from Vietnam. That one came out of the blue. They were labeled a currency manipulator two years ago, and now there are supposed to be hearings before the end of the year. Who knows? Theres the overhang of the change in administrations, a lot of policies that could happen at the last second.
VentureBeat: We have more of an enterprise focus these days. Do you see much of that at CES?
Shapiro: We definitely do. I talk to a lot of CEOs, and they keep educating me on all the stuff that goes on from an enterprise standpoint. Its a show focused on innovation, and as I say in my opening keynote, people are doing deals at CES across categories, across verticals. Thats why, when we tried to create the digital venues, we talked about how to get those lines out real quickly from one industry and one company to another. Thats what CES is so valuable for. Ive talked to representatives from many different companies in many different industries, and thats what they stress.
If you look at some of the companies we have, huge market leaders from other categories have chosen to use the digital venue. Whether its agriculture or manufacturing, you name it. Its shocking to me, some of the names in there. Leaders in industry.
VentureBeat: Is there anything big on your radar as far as the regulatory front?
Shapiro: If you count litigation, every day theres news about a new company being sued by the government. A lot of our crown jewel companies. Its catnip to the European regulators and others who want to hurt U.S. companies. A lot of U.S. employees, stockholders, pension funds rely on these companies. Theyre keeping the stock market aloft. It seems like a peculiar strategy, to attack our best companies through these vague laws. And to go back with a subpoena request like the FTC has, going back years with these broad requests that cripple companies look what happened to Microsoft when that happened years ago. They stood still for several years. Its not a good idea.
Section 230 is obviously top of mind. Facebook and Google, the neighborhood companies, the ratings companies, all these things we rely on as consumers to figure out where we should eat, what places we should stay in so many things are connected with that. Policymakers are divorced from reality on this one, frankly. Republicans and Democrats are angry at a few companies because they think theyre being mistreated, but theyre oblivious to the fact that most Americans are very happy writing comments and things like that. Companies have done an amazing job like Facebook. To have the State Department evaluating every [political ad placed on a companys social platform] and their politics, whether their political ads are accurate or not its just impossible, what theyre demanding. And it obviously has constitutional ramifications that are absolutely huge.
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