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2017 Virginia Business Meeting Planner of the Year

//September 29, 2017//

2017 Virginia Business Meeting Planner of the Year

// September 29, 2017//

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Tracie Grady

Vice president of operations and meetings
Eisenman & Associates Inc., Richmond

Tracie Grady is more than an event planner to her clients.

“Truly, her title should be ‘Meeting Planner Extraordinaire,’” says Lisha Reynolds, professional development manager for the Virginia Transportation Construction Alliance, a member of the Virginia Society of Association Executives (VSAE), one of Grady’s clients. “This group has high expectations and demands … Tracie consistently delivers high-quality meetings for these professional planners, hoteliers and association executives.”

Grady’s expertise has earned her the Virginia Business Meeting Planner of the Year Award, a collaboration between Virginia Business and the VSAE, which serves the commonwealth’s association management industry. Grady was among a dozen people nominated for this year’s award and judged by a panel of hospitality industry professionals. She will be recognized at VSAE’s 2017 Educational Symposium & Expo Oct. 5 at the Greater Richmond Convention Center. The expo, planned by Grady, draws 500 people each year.

Grady has two decades of meeting planning experience. She’s currently vice president of operations and meetings for Eisenman & Associates Inc., a Richmond-based association management and meetings consulting company. At Eisenman she’s responsible for planning more than half a dozen events for VSAE and the Independent Insurance Agents of Virginia Inc.

“It’s never the same day twice,” says Grady when asked what she likes most about her job. “Even though there’s a routine planning each event, and most of them are annuals, or repeats month after month, there’s always aspects that change or improvements to be made following each event.”

Her first job in the industry was as an administrator at the Virginia Association of Elementary School Principals (VAESP) where she served more than 1,000 members and managed more than 45 conferences and conventions over five years. 

Grady was fortunate to find a mentor, Harriet Harris, then-director of sales at the Fort Magruder Inn in Williamsburg, to guide her through the early stages of her career. Grady recalls Harris coming to her aid when she was planning her first event. Grady accidentally ordered food for the meeting from a grocery store in Virginia Beach instead of one in Williamsburg where the event was being held, and the reception was in two hours. Harris went to different stores to grab food for the meeting so Grady could focus on the rest of the event. Besides helping her in a pinch, Harris was “a wealth of information to have in your back pocket,” Grady says.

Today, Grady has garnered the admiration of other meeting planners. David Norman points to Grady’s immaculate planning of VSAE’s Awards Luncheon and Silent Auction, which is attended by more than 250 people. “She makes it look easy, but as a fellow meeting planner, I know it’s not,” says Norman, executive director of Norman and Associates.

The latter event is one of Grady’s favorites to organize. VSAE hands out Awards of Excellence to members who don’t know they’ve won until their name is announced from the podium the night of the event. The winners’ family members and colleagues also make a surprise appearance, which Grady coordinates. “It’s a very exciting and rewarding experience,” Grady says.

When asked to name her greatest career achievement, Grady says, receiving the Meeting Planner of the Year Award is an honor. She also counts her work at Eisenman & Associates Inc., as a major accomplishment. “I feel like I’ve been so blessed to be able to work in this role and develop myself personally and professionally,” she says.

Tracie’s Take
Favorite event venue: The Omni Richmond. “The consistency of the support staff there is great,” she says.

Preparation is key: When she’s packing for a multiday meeting she has planned, Grady organizes items by day and activity. “I have a box set for Monday, or box for Tuesday,” she says. “When I get to that meeting, it's organized, and I know if I need something, for example for installation, it's going to be in that box for that day.”

Biggest challenge when planning an event: Food and beverage. Managing people with “food allergies or intolerant situations where you can’t have peanuts in the room because someone is so allergic that they can’t smell it” can be difficult, she says. “Those things always kind of haunt me.” 

Speak up: Grady has narcolepsy, but she has been able to alter her work schedule to accommodate the condition. “It’s been a challenge and I think sometimes people are more worried about not sharing their needs, and what ails them, than allowing people to step in and help, or to make suggestions, or share experiences,” she says.

Meeting planning today versus 20 years ago: “When I first started I was just learning how to use external email functionality and a fax machine,” she says. “Technology has really come a long way, with having [meeting] registrations online. Everything is more streamlined and has really produced many more efficiencies in the tasks that we do.”

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