In this on-demand episode, Paul Bobin (The Other Mind) and Pierre Metrailler (Onomi) unpack a hard truth about congress ROI: it rarely fails because teams lack effort. It fails because the most critical moment of the entire investment, the five-minute booth conversation, is treated as operational detail rather than strategic leverage.
The contradiction is clear. Pharma spends months preparing content, symposia, logistics and internal alignment. Yet preparation for human interaction at the booth is compressed, deprioritized or skipped altogether.
Paul’s perspective was direct. Congress is not a normal selling environment. It is high-pressure, noisy and unnatural. Confidence drops. Behaviors shift. And the most expensive assumption in booth execution is believing that “they are salespeople, they know how to talk.”
Pierre connected this to measurement. Most teams optimize what is easiest to report, not what drives follow-up. Booth traffic, badge scans and a busy stand may look impressive, but they do not equal meaningful engagement. Without structure, visibility and CRM-connected next steps, activity rarely turns into impact.
The conclusion was clear: when human performance and technology are aligned, congress stops being a reporting exercise and starts becoming a measurable driver of engagement.


