Thursday, 31 March 2011
European Union Places Full Internet Access High on its Agenda
On average, 94% of Europeans had high-speed broadband access by the end of 2009, but that proportion fell to 80% in rural areas.
The Commission believes that fast and ultra-fast broadband could revolutionise people's lives in the same way that railways did 100 years ago, with applications not just for jobs and businesses, but for health and education as well.
This measure is in response of the Asian competition that benefits of much higher speed internet connection and which puts at disadvantage the European Business and customers..
For example, only 1% of consumers in Europe have a high-speed fibre connection in their homes compared to 12% of Japanese and 15% of South Koreans.
The Commission estimates that between €180 and €270 billion of investment is needed in order to meet the 2020 broadband targets.
However, a recent study shows that, assuming a constant adoption rate up to 2015, broadband development will help create around 1 million jobs in Europe and a broadband-related growth of economic activity of € 850 billion between 2006 and 2015.
The impact on European industry is clearly positive: apart from civil work for networks which has a direct impact on local employment, sales of network equipment will also benefit global European suppliers (like Siemens, Ericsson, Nokia, Alcatel-Lucent), as well as telecoms or satellite operators. And areas with advanced broadband connections will see an increase in demand for products and services.
Sources :
http://ec.europa.eu/
http://www.cellular-news.com
Tuesday, 22 February 2011
Event planning 2.0

How can marketing departments use these trends in order to provide new tools to the event planners? Surveys have shown that in the USA spending in social marketing will increase by 34 %/ year until 2014. The event and meeting industry has to take advantage of this situation.
The new ROI stands not (only) anymore for Return on Investment but for Risk of Ignoring, which empathizes the importance for event planners to care for these new trends, vital for the successful survival in the MICE domain. Only organizers who will be able to adapt to the challenges, which present the new technologies, will be able to correctly exploit the new opportunities.
Event planners will still use predominately traditional tools to communicate as telephone, e-mail etc., nevertheless they cannot ignore the current trends in order to hit new target groups. Interactive tools enable event planners to communicate and share information about for instance good speakers, venues, former events and latest event information. It is therefore important to integrate social media at each stage of the event planning: before (social media monitoring: to benchmark the competitors and to analyze the environment), during (to share content and allow UGC) and after (to spread feedback to the attendees as well as the prospects for future events).
Some other examples could be easy communication about the event program and program changes via Twitter in order to keep all participants updated, setting up a help desk via a blog, it will present technical support for registrations and assure that everybody has the same knowledge level before attending an event. Furthermore, the new technologies enable sharing, networking and voting during the event. Thanks to these tools the so far passive audience can be turned into active participants. Moreover, tools as Skype will enable the integration of far away speakers to the meeting.
As a conclusion we can say that the article shows the importance of staying updated with the current technologies for all members of the MICE industry. A refuse could result in important losses of performance for the event planners. Nevertheless, we all have to keep in mind that these changes require a large amount of expenditures, know-how and man power. Constant monitoring, technical infrastructure and support need to be provided. Social media consultants and specialists can provide their help.
image : http://www.markevanstech.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/social-media-consultant.jpg