Business Guide - brought to you by APL Media • Wednesday 15 February 2023
IT, technology & communications • 11 ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE
WHAT EXCEL LONDON’S NEW EXPANSION PROJECT WILL LOOK LIKE WHEN CONMPLETED IN 2024 Trade shows key to accelerating growth
It’s no trade secret. In-person business events aren’t just back, they’re booming, and firmly in the driving seat to reviving London’s tourism economy…
Since the first formally recorded markets were documented around 3,000 BC, humans have engaged in trade… face-to-face. Along the way, they’ve overcome wars, pestilences and countless other calamities, not to mention Zoom calls. On 11 March 2020, the events
industry — like so many businesses — was forced to apply the brakes. Nothing could have prepared the UK’s £31.2bn trade show sector for the Covid-19 pandemic. Travel ceased, in-person contact was suspended and the notion of all future encounters being entirely online looked worryingly real. Watching this unfold was the
capital’s largest event venue ExCeL London. Its economic and social importance — both pre, during and post-Covid — is hard to overstate. Piloted by CEO Jeremy Rees, the carbon neutral venue welcomes around four million visitors annually, hosts close to 400 large- scale events, supports 37,600 jobs and generates £4.5bn for London’s economy. During the pandemic, it
appeal, has never faltered,” comments ExCeL’s Rees. “London is where the world meets. Just last month, it was voted the best city in the world to impress clients and regularly retains its crown as Europe’s leading hub for tech investment. Trade shows are well placed to not just capitalise on this, but to act as a catalyst for import/ export, as well as act as a halo effect.” The data supports this. At its
JEREMY REES, CEO OF EXCEL LONDON
even became the country’s largest hospital and later vaccinated some 150,000 patients. Now, three years on and with
the pandemic firmly in its rear- view mirror, London, ExCeL and the events sector isn’t just back, it’s busier than ever and a proven catalyst for business tourism.
SO, WHAT DO WE HAVE TO THANK FOR THIS REMARKABLE TURN OF FATE? AND WHY LONDON? “The spirit of those in the industry, combined with London’s global
height, £165bn was transacted at UK events with every borough in London receiving a share of the £12.9bn spent by inbound tourism. Working with the likes of Visit Britain, London & Partners and Business London, ExCeL has been able to lure global household brands to the capital, with some leading tech giants generating upwards of £100m in a single day. But for all its 69 Michelin-starred
restaurants and 123,000 hotel rooms, London also unveiled another key asset. “The high-speed Elizabeth line
has been a game-changer,” continues Rees. “It’s removed the friction of traveling across London meaning door-to-door, ExCeL is just 12 minutes from the West End and 43 minutes from Heathrow Airport. That means more visitors, a higher likelihood of C-Suite guests and a longer dwell time.” All this has resulted in ExCeL
EXCEL LONDON HOSTING FORMULA E
needing to expand. The current 100,000sqm of ExCeL’s event space will shortly (2024) increase by a further 25,000sq m thanks to a new development at the east of the venue. Sustainably built and sitting proudly
EXAMPLES OF THE 400 EVENTS EXCEL HOSTS EVER YEAR - THE WORLD TRAVEL MARKET
alongside the ever-changing skyline of London’s Royal Docks, the nine- figure expansion project was green-lit at the height of the pandemic — showing even then the confidence that the market would prevail and putting London at the forefront of world-leading events. Unquestionably, the appetite for
trade — and with it trade shows — has returned. According to a recent Bellweather Report, firms are pressing ahead with their spending plans and increasing marketing budgets. “What we’ve seen in the events
sector is for those parties to focus their budgets on tier-one events, with tier-one marketing and, most importantly for London and ExCeL, in tier-one cities.”
SO, WHAT OF THE FUTURE? “Over the coming years, the event sector will, for sure, face fresh challenges,” says Rees. “Sustainability is becoming an increasingly important factor and one we’ve now put at the forefront of our agenda, but while formats will vary, the hunger to connect, learn, trade and engage will always remain.”
For more info
Visit:
excel.london E:
salesenquiries@excel.london
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