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PRIVACY
Opinion

The huge economic impact of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's event industry

During the pandemic the sector was hit hard but now is returning to face to face events

A business awards event

During the pandemic, the events industry across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ was hit hard as venues were shut, Covid rules were brought in to restrict attendance and there was a general reluctance by sponsors and businesses to get involved in a situation where uncertainty and cancellations were the norm.

Whilst there was a shift to online events and meetings and there was some success in making this transition, this did not make up for the lost revenue from holding live events across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Given that much of the sector was essentially stopped from working during the last two years, it is easy to forget that the event industry is a significant contributor to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy, with a recent report submitted to the Department of Digital Culture Media and Sport estimating that the industry generates £84bn every year with conferences and business events generating over £18bn in direct spend annually.

Of course, nothing beats attending a live events as opposed to sitting in front of a computer as one participant in a virtual event. As someone who has been involved in organising business awards for nearly a quarter of a century, I experienced this first hand when the Wales Startup Awards and the Wales Legal Awards went online in the autumn of 2020 when there was no other alternative given the country was in lockdown.

Whilst both awards were well received by the participants, it was clear that they were a poor substitute for live events. Indeed, when the Wales Startup Awards were organised as a live event at the Depot in Cardiff in June 2021, it sold out in days and became the biggest business event of the year with over 650 attendees, demonstrating how the entrepreneurial community wanted to get together to celebrate their achievements together.

In fact, the success of that event directly led to the expansion of the Welsh awards into the National Startup Awards to celebrate new businesses across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ. Having received over 2,600 entries from across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, a shortlist of 900 startups from the nations and regions of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ was announced this week with the finalists having a collective turnover of over £300m and employing 600 employees (despite being new businesses less than three years old).

And given the responses by these finalists already to getting back to live events, it will be great to have 5,000 people celebrating entrepreneurship in nine cities later this summer.

This positivity towards getting ‘back in the room’ with others has also been reflected in the responses to the 2022 Wales Legal Awards.