Posts

Showing posts with the label destinations international

Joining the Board of City Destinations Alliance

Image
The International Conference and General Assembly of City Destinations Alliance, held this year in Helsinki under the theme "The Human Pulse of Place and Purpose," concluded on 22 April with a Board election that brings several new members into the network's governance. Leena Lassila from Helsinki Partners, Marie-Louise Schnurpfeil from Linz Tourismus, and I were elected as Board Members for three-year terms. Gerry Lennon from Visit Belfast was re-elected, and Maya Janssen from Amsterdam & Partners was elected Vice-President for a one-year mandate. The continuing Executive Committee, led by Barbara Jamison-Woods as President, was confirmed in its composition. For me, this is a moment worth pausing on. Joining the Board of CityDNA is an honour, and equally an invitation to contribute more actively to a network I have long respected and learned from. It also arrives at a particularly interesting point in the wider conversation about what European city destinations are ...

Leading Destinations in a Fragmented World - Reflections from DI CEO Summit

Image
The CEO Summit in Newport Beach brought together a consistent message across discussions. The role of destination leadership is expanding as the environment around it becomes more complex and less predictable. This combination is reshaping what the job actually is. The global context: growth with increasing complexity Travel and tourism continue to grow and remain one of the largest economic sectors globally. The scale is significant, both in terms of GDP contribution and employment. Growth, however, is no longer a simple indicator of success. The conditions behind that growth are changing. Geopolitical tensions, rising costs, and shifting travel patterns are all influencing how and where people travel. Long-haul travel is becoming more expensive. Regional dynamics are shifting, with Asia Pacific and the Middle East gaining momentum, while some traditional markets are facing slower recovery in international demand. Domestic travel remains a stabilising force. In many countries it repre...