Access All Areas Summer Issue | Page 7

SUMMER | AGENDA ‘Wellbeing’ Esports, fan zones and ‘festivalisation’ set to grow major events According to data and expert opinion presented at the MEI Summit in Villa Park, Birmingham, major event opportunities are growing. Esports is set to grow 18.4% from US$805m (2018) to $1,580m in 2022, divulged Nicolas Besombes, associate professor in Sports Sciences, Paris Descartes University, who outlined increased opportunities for revenue from streaming, sponsorship and media rights within the sector. Andy Rice, COO of Major Events International, went on to detail the increased creative opportunities through major events, nodding to Royal De Luxe Theatre’s work. “What Cirque Du Soleil has done for circus (contemporised and glamorised), the Royal De Luxe Theatre has done for street art. The Sultan’s Elephant of 2012 (pictured) and the visits of the Giants to Liverpool were both their creations. The Soundscape installed by Martyn Ware on the Millennial Bridge also deserves a mention for sheer innovation and imagination. I predict we will be seeing more production teams creating shareable experiences within a cityscape.” He also outlined how stadia and venues can cash in, or add value using ‘festivalisation’ and entertainment opportunities. “Tottenham Hotspur have added a DJ to the team at their new £1bn home. Andy Purnell DJ’d for every home match after their move, including a large festival-style stage outside of the ground on the final game of the season. Circa 5,000 fans stayed for two hours after the match. He also DJ’d at the THFC fan zone in Madrid ahead of the Champions League Final which lasted for five hours and entertained over 10,000 fans. It is certainly a growing trend. “Sponsor sponsored fan zones now spring up for all significant England games around the country. This trend will continue into September for the Rugby World Cup. I Lorraine Thorne, venue sales manager Royal Horticultural Halls anticipate London becoming a massive European Festival site in July 2020 to coincide with the semi-finals and finals of the Euros, which will be held at Wembley.” Giles Stanford, director of global projects at MEI member CSM Live, agrees this trend will continue because of the political strategy to generate inward investment, visitors and publicity. “City Centre events have always been there but now they are getting more attention and thought because of the power of social media, it is a proven way to raise profile, investment and so create a new audience.” Stanford expects to see an increase in large public open-air city-wide theatres. “Whilst expensive, these can be highly original and compelling. We will continue to see changes in sports presentation, with cities becoming the arena for new sport formats such as 3x3 basketball; variations of modern pentathlon and biathlon, skateboarding, sports climbing and many more.” Rice concludes: “The IOC is only too aware that it has an aging core audience and is being proactive and innovative in its courtship of the younger generation, why else even begin a conversation about the possibility of Esports becoming part of the Olympic family? “You only have to look at the Paris 2024 exhibition sports: breaking, sport climbing, skateboarding and surfing, to identify the direction of travel. Interestingly, all these sports have deep cultural, non-stadium based roots.” ‘Well-being’ is the right buzzword for our industry right now. Across the UK, 15.4m days are lost due to stress, depression or anxiety with each person affected taking around 25.8 days off per year according to the Health & Safety Executive. That’s a huge dent in the bottom line whilst putting pressure on everyone else on the team. This year we hosted a free wellbeing festival De-Stress Fest which saw nearly 200 organisers receive 140 treatments and learn how they could reduce stress at work and at home. Treatments such as Access Bars ‘de-frag’ the brain restoring a sense of calm when overloaded, rebalancing the mind and body allows equilibrium to be restored and aromatherapy oils can achieve calm and relaxation in an office environment through using a diffuser. The survey that followed showed that it was exactly what people wanted, but more of it. The Royal Horticultural Society, which owns the Lindley and Lawrence Halls has pledged to improve mental wellbeing in the workplace through the ‘Time to Change’ campaign, set out to end discrimination against mental health. We have Wellbeing Champions who can signpost employees to the appropriate person for their needs and around World Mental Health Day on 10 October we will have a week of wellbeing programmes for staff to enjoy. In fact, it is the intention that we have a wellbeing activity every month. Stress Matters created a pledge purely for event industry, and run Mental Health First Aid workshops to train line managers how to deal with colleagues suffering stress and how to spot the signs. So, let’s take stock of all the things available to us and take time out to achieve more. 07