
There’s a lot to be said for being there in person. A recent trip to the US was a good reminder of that – starting in Philadelphia, delivering an event for a client, and then continuing on to New York for a series of meetings and catch-ups. Two very different paces, but equally important. In Philadelphia, the focus was execution. Being on the ground, managing the detail in real time, and ensuring everything ran exactly as it should.
There’s a level of control and clarity you only get from being physically present – reading a room, adjusting the flow, making decisions quickly. Then New York shifted the perspective. Less about delivery, more about connection. Time spent with clients, partners, and industry contacts – some longstanding, some new. Conversations that don’t happen over email, and relationships that are strengthened simply by being face to face. That balance is always valuable. Because while the work itself matters, how you maintain relationships matters just as much – especially in this space. It’s a small industry, built on trust, familiarity, and shared standards.
Trips like this aren’t just about projects. They’re about staying close to the people and places that shape them. And that’s something that never really changes.