Conference News August 2020 | Page 21

BUMP IN THE FREEWAY Martin Fullard talks to Sophie Sweetman, an event freelancer caught out by the Covid-19 menace THE IMPACT OF Covid-19 on the events industry has so far been very much defined by headlines. The notion that 30,000 jobs could be gone in August is frightening in itself. Behind every statistic, however, is a person’s life and livelihood. To a point, the headlines of doom and despair almost dehumanise the reality faced by the tens of thousands of event professionals across the country. It doesn’t even feel right to describe any one corner of the events world as having it harder than another: much like the virus itself, its economic impact is indiscriminate. In July, I received a message from an old colleague who told me she had decided to embrace freelance work back in November. Sophie Sweetman and I used to work at a place called Daytona Sandown Park, a kart circuit in Surrey, and her message reminded me of my events background. Sophie has more than 10 years’ experience in the industry, working for agencies such as Pure and Imagination, and taking the plunge into the freelance world was supposed to be the dawn of a new and exciting era. Talk about bad timing. We decided to catch up over Zoom, not to reminisce about old times, but because her story resonates with thousands of other. “The last 10 years 21 Freelancers have been an amazing journey,” she tells me. “I started at a venue, working at Kensington Roof Gardens, before moving into agency life, which has been fantastic, working at Principle Global Events, Pure Events (now the Pure Communications Group) and for Imagination. “Over the years I have worked on a variety of events with many different clients, like conferences, incentives, parties and festivals. It has been amazing.” The positive adjectives Sophie keeps using does makes plain her love for the industry. November seems a life time away, so I ask her why she decided to make the jump to freelance. “I met a few freelancers along the way and they always seemed to have a good time,” she says. “They told me I would have the variety and the freedom of being able to choose projects and when I worked. It sounded appealing. It started off well and I felt like I was living the dream. “I was working at CWT Meetings and Events on a great project with such a great team. The beginning of this year saw me in Orlando, Bangkok, and Dublin; and it was great. “Then this [Covid-19] happened.” I ask Sophie if she thinks the events industry will change for good after all this, www.conference-news.co.uk