0 Comment(s) 03/10/2008 +0100 GMT
by Nick Grecian
The managing director of Gallowglass reckons he’s found the
answer to cost effectively and efficiently sourcing suppliers for
meetings, conferences and events held abroad.
The perennial
dilemma for organisers of overseas events is whether to take production
kit and rigging crews out from the UK, or to source local suppliers at
the event destination. Neither solution is ideal.
For those
who plump for the overseas supplier option, the term ‘lost in
translation’ covers a multitude of snags – ranging from misunderstood
specifications, to incompatible systems and inadequate back-up
equipment. And the instinctive desire to work with a partner who
‘thinks the way we do’ is so much harder to fulfil when you are
starting with a new supplier with untested service delivery standards.
Expensive option
British
event organisers tend to feel more secure working with home-grown
resources and people who speak the same language – in every sense of
the word. But stories are legion of impounded kit that was only
released on presentation of wads of cash.
These ‘gifts’ aside,
exporting equipment and services is an expensive option and one that
can be hard to justify to corporate purchasers.
Biting the bullet
As
a crewing company we’ve been tasked with setting up event
infrastructures all over the world, and have heard countless stories of
organisers being let down by untrained, unreliable and uncooperative
rigging crews that had been sourced locally.
At the same
time, we couldn’t fail to notice the growing frustration of our clients
at having to export manpower to work on large numbers of overseas
events.
The pressure gradually mounted for us to set up our
own overseas operation, and so, in 2005, we bit the bullet and
established two European offices – in the South of France and
Barcelona.
Skills and knowledge
Since then, we have
recruited crews from all over Europe. We have trained them to
understand and work to our own safety and efficiency standards – and
they have needed that training. Many of them are bilingual, and therefore comfortable working for both UK and domestic clients.
In
addition to us being able to provide a local, or at least national
resource, our European network has enabled us to build up extensive
knowledge of all the congress centres and leading hotels on the Cote
d’Azur and in Northern Spain, creating efficiencies and streamlining
the whole rig and de-rig process at those venues.
Going forward
The
fact that so many of the leading events agencies are progressively
setting up bases in Europe, the Middle East and the US suggests to us
that this is the way forward for the industry.
Within the
boundaries of managed growth, we fully intend to progress with offices
in other countries and continents. Our European offices are still
servicing a high volume of events that are organised by UK-based
clients, but as time goes on we will grow the business from the local
markets as well.
Going global is not without its headaches –
one of which is the tangle of legislation and the administrative hoops
that have to be jumped through to set up a business overseas.
Getting
the first foothold always takes longer than you expect. But with fuel
and transport costs set to continue upwards and many meetings
consolidating into continental or global events, an international
capability is likely to become an inevitable requirement for any
serious player in the events industry.
Nick Grecian is managing director of Gallowglass







































