----- Original Message ----- From: "Jari Arkko" <jari.arkko@xxxxxxxxx> To: "Mary Barnes" <mary.h.barnes@xxxxxxxxx>; "Eric Gray" <eric.gray@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Cc: "IETF Discussion" <ietf@xxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, January 04, 2016 8:27 PM Eric, Mary, > And this has been a worsening trend. I've attended most IETF meetings in the last 20 years (I have the t-shirts to prove it) and I can remember when it was still possible to book a room at one of the meeting hotels at the IETF rate at least up to the block cut-off date (as opposed to an hour after the hotel information is made available). I think you are right, and we need to fix that. > Something changed for IETF hotel bookings about the time of the bubble-burst and most of us don't have any visibility into what that is. We can speculate, but there seems to be empirical data that supports the idea that it is not an unsolvable problem. It is not, I think. Still, it is a set of tradeoffs. The IETF has a set of requirements, and one needs to balance them all. For instance, bigger room blocks mean some more risk / smaller pool of hotels to choose from / at least theoretically higher price. I readily acknowledge though that we have not succeeded as well as we should have in some recent cases, such as the BA hotel block size combined with the fact that the next hotels were not across the street. > [MB] My personal thought here is that the change has been due to the fact that we seem to be going to more exotic venues and also to venues that are more touristy destinations - e.g., Orlando during one of the busiest weeks of the year, Europe in the summer, Hawaii in November, etc. Out of the last fifteen meetings: Yokohama, Prague, Dallas, Honolulu, Toronto, London, Vancouver, Berlin, Orlando, Atlanta, Vancouver, Paris, Taipei, Quebec, Praque, Beijing I count only two (Honolulu and Orlando) that were clearly touristy destinations. I’m not sure you should count summer meetings in Europe as touristy, we still plan to meet somewhere during summers - unless of course we go the Adelaides and Buenos Aireses during the northern hemisphere summer :-) <tp> Jari, >From my UK perspective, Paris has long been a major tourist destination while Beijing now figures prominently and Berlin has its fans. I understand that from outside the UK, the Oxford Street shops are a major draw to London, especially to those in China, Japan and such like so I think that the touristy list is a little longer. I would not say we should avoid such locations - London in March seemed to work well - but I would see it as a small mark against. (On the other hand, a plus for Minnesota is the (remote) chance of seeing the Vikings, so this issue may be rather subjective:-) I think that the availabillity of hotel rooms and work rooms should dominate the choice. Tom Petch In any case, I think given our participants, it seems fair to have something resembling the 1-1-1* circulation model. We could discuss whether there should be more standardisation of the destinations in those areas. In the last 15 meetings there was two repeats (Prague and Vancouver) where I think we had successful meeting environments. We have one announced repeat coming up soon, and the IAOC is working on several more. I expect at least two of those to succeed, maybe more. I take the guidance to the IAOC should be at least: - make sure the room blocks are better sufficient than they have been in last meetings - use successful meeting places multiple times What else? > prefers Minneapolis Personally, I love cold places, particularly during winter. But for the record, Minneapolis has some drawbacks, too, such as flight connections being somewhat limited compared to, say, Vancouver or Dallas or Atlanta. In my experience, at least. The IETF has been to many hotels and cities where we’ve had a great experience from their meeting environment and sufficient availability of rooms. Jari