Suite Spot: A Hotel Marketing Podcast
The Hunter Conference is a pivotal networking hub where major deals, brand launches, and industry insights occur, making its evolution critical for hospitality professionals. Understanding the event’s new location, rebrand, and innovative session formats helps attendees maximize value, stay ahead of emerging trends, and connect with the broader hospitality community.
The 2026 Hunter Conference returns to Atlanta, this time housed in the brand‑new Signia by Hilton. The modern venue offers abundant natural light, a streamlined floor plan, and proximity to the Mercedes‑Benz Stadium and State Farm Arena, giving attendees easy access to city attractions and a Hawks game discount. Relocating a flagship hospitality gathering to such a purpose‑built space underscores the event’s role as the industry’s networking hub, where owners, operators, investors, and students converge to forge deals and share insights.
Alongside the venue upgrade, Hunter Advisors unveiled a comprehensive rebrand that highlights clarity, confidence, and a personal‑centric voice. The fresh logo and clean website design signal the organization’s commitment to evolve while preserving its family‑owned roots. Programming also gets a makeover: the introduction of 20‑minute focus sessions replaces generic panels with deep‑dive case studies, especially around emerging topics like artificial intelligence in hotel operations. By pairing real‑world tools with partner expertise, these sessions aim to equip owners with actionable tactics, turning conference learning into immediate performance gains.
The agenda features heavyweight speakers, including Hilton CEO Chris Nassetta and Atlanta Hawks owner Tony Ressler, whose perspectives bridge hospitality and broader entertainment trends. The annual Hunter Conference Award for Excellence honors Glade M. Knight of Apple Hospitality, recognizing his visionary leadership and impact on the investment landscape. Attendees can also tap into informal networking in the lobby, the adjacent sports venues, and curated social events, which historically spark deal‑making and knowledge exchange. Together, the new location, refreshed brand, and targeted programming position the 2026 conference as a must‑attend milestone for any hospitality professional.
The 2026 Hunter Conference takes place on March 16-28, in Atlanta, Georgia, at the Signia by Hilton. Tune in to the preview episode as hoteliers and hospitality professionals prepare for the cornerstone industry event.
Special Guest, Madison Thibodeaux, Senior Manager, Events & Partnerships at Hunter Advisors, joins the Suite Spot to share insights and behind-the-scenes details about what conference attendees can look forward to from speakers, panels, themes, F&B, and much more.
Ryan Embree:
Welcome to Suite Spot, where hoteliers check in and we check out what's trending in hotel marketing. I'm your host, Ryan Embree. Hello everyone. Welcome to another episode of The Suite Spot. This is your host, Ryan Embree here, a familiar episode, if you can believe it. I've got a jacket on because it is absolutely frigid outside, but we're thawing out. We're getting ready for conference season and covering some of the biggest hospitality events of the season with the first one being the Hunter Conference. And I am here with, even though this is the Suite Spot's, third time attending the conference, we have a first time guest, which I'm really, really happy to bring in. Maddie Thibodeaux Senior Manager, Events and Partnerships at Hunter Advisors and Conference. Maddie, thank you so much for joining the Suite Spot.
Madison Thibodeaux:
Thank you for having me, Ryan. I'm really excited to be here.
Ryan Embree:
We are going to have a constant theme throughout this episode of a lot of the things you love about Hunter, but a lot of new things on the horizon as well, which I'm sure you and your team have been extremely busy. We can't wait. Hoteliers can't wait. Sponsors can't wait. This is gonna be one for the books, but before we get into all that, Maddie, we have kind of a tradition here on the Suite Spot, especially for our first time Suite Spot guest. Tell us a little bit about your background in the industry and the journey that led you to Hunter Advisors and Conference.
Madison Thibodeaux:
Yeah, I would love to talk about that. So my journey almost pretty much started at Hunter, which I know you've had Sarah as a guest on your podcast as well, and I'm sure she has a little bit of a similar story. But I was a student at Georgia State University, the Cecil B. Day School of Hospitality. I am one of the odd people that when I got to college, I already knew that I wanted to be in the hospitality industry, which I think is a rare story that you hear. Most people typically fall into it. But I went into school knowing that I wanted to be in event management. I wanted to plan events. And so throughout college I had a few different internships in hospitality. So I got some experience in the different sectors of hospitality. I worked with a catering company. I worked at a hotel in Cape Cod one summer, which was a lot of fun. Got some operational experience in hotels with the front desk and housekeeping. And then my junior year of college, Dr. Debbie Cannon at the School of Hospitality made me aware of the internship that was open at Hunter for their conference intern. And so I applied for the role, got it, accepted it. I worked for Hunter my junior and senior year. Got a lot of hands-on experience planning the event as the intern. And something that Hunter does really amazingly is they really give anyone on their team, even if you're an intern, a platform and a seat at the table to where you can really innovate with them and present your ideas. And some of them you can see like actually come to life. And so I had a lot of great mentors at Hunter who really, you know, prepared me as a student with my professional development. And so had a great time with Hunter once I graduated from Atlanta, moved out to Chicago and started working in the trade show side of things for an exhibitor services company called GES and got a little bit more trade show experience so that I could come back to Hunter and, you know,
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