PHILIPSBURG, St. Maarten: The 21st annual Florida-Caribbean Cruise Association (FCCA) Conference & Trade Show opened today (October 7), gathering about 1,000 cruise tourism stakeholders and 100 cruise executives, presidents and CEOs from the 15 FCCA Member Lines, which operate over 100 ships in Caribbean and Latin American waters.
The event offers a four-day agenda chock-full of business sessions, networking opportunities and chances to maximize cruise tourism’s impact, along with the attention and knowledge of cruise line personnel who decide where cruise ships call, what to sell onboard and if they should invest in destination infrastructure.
“The [FCCA Conference & Trade Show] gives you direct contact with some of the most influential decision makers in the cruise industry,” says Kevin Sheehan, Norwegian Cruise Line CEO and FCCA chairman.
The focus is on developing business, relationships and knowledge. The Conference’s business sessions offer this through one-on-one meetings, where attendees have up to three meetings with their selected cruise executives. Plus workshops share the executives’, presidents’, CEOs’ and stakeholders’ insight to help attendees learn about topics such as the cruise lines’ latest happenings and route for the future; creating and maintaining a successful tour product; developing a port in partnership with the FCCA, cruise lines and the private/public sectors; and increasing cruise tourism through a unified vision, collaboration between the private and public sectors, and continual product development and innovation.
“FCCA events always give me an opportunity to meet valuable industry stakeholders,” shares Adam Goldstein, president and COO of Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. “These are the people who have ideas and projects I want, and need, to know about.”
The Trade Show—the largest in the event’s history—allows exhibitors to target the influential audience looking to source new business and expand existing business. Any booth puts spotlights a product, company or destination, and specialized pavilions showcase a large company or destination as a team, with a roster including destination ministries, port authorities, tour operators and vendors.
Exposure is guaranteed through numerous events hosted there, such as a cruise executive preview before the official opening, an exclusive cocktail reception for cruise executives and Platinum Members, the Conference’s Wednesday night social function and the first FCCA Table Tennis Tournament, hosted by Adam Goldstein.
Traffic is also driven by a business center and the Trade Show’s location itself, with all attendees entering and passing through to access the Conference’s meetings, workshops, business sessions and registration.
Interaction between Conference delegates, Trade Show exhibitors and cruise line decision makers is further spurred by social functions planned by St. Maarten. And St. Maarten certainly plans to engage the attendees, as Port St. Maarten partnered with the government and local businesses to display its exciting setting, activities and WOW factor through some of the same experiences and venues that cruise passengers see and do.
In all, the FCCA Conference & Trade Show creates the perfect forum for exchanging information, sharing ideas and forging relationships. The continued involvement and invaluable insight of some of the cruise industry’s key decision makers, along with a ratio of about one cruise executive per 10 attendees, make the event one of the best ways to directly target the cruise industry and maximize its benefits.
woow you guys, smh are really missing the point here, was Dominica partaking in this convention and why not i would really like to know why not please have a look and see what we are really missing out on, then turn to those whom it is their responsibility and demand answers thank you..
http://www.smn-news.com/st-maarten-st-martin-news/16898-workshops-and-discussions-on-how-to-improve-tourism-in-the-caribbean-held-on-second-day-of-fcca-conference.html
If DNO does not even ad to the story the public will not know if Dominica part.
No body cares that Roseau smells like a dump – it has been that was for decades – the minister of tourism could not care less – he travels, claims his per diem, stays in great hotels – come on now –
Dominicans like it so…..
You get what you deserve…..
I’m keeping my fingers crossed for Roseau and hope for the best because the place still looking and smelling like a dump.
You all the first to criticize all you country.If it’s a dump why don’t you help clean it up instead of your critics?
It is not so important that I criticize the condition of Roseau. After all I am just an ordinary citizen with little influence. But it are the visitors and cruise lines that are important for the income of many of our locals and it is their impression and experience that count and decide whether or not a cruise line will increase it’s frequency of calls or, God forbid pull out altogether.
As for helping out, I don’t mind but then we question must be asked what do we have a city council for?
People here don’t care about much of anything or anybody except themselves and what they personally want even if it belongs to someone else. There is no hope for a people like this and the churches don’t seem to have much success in changing them. Not a good place to be when s…t really hits the fan.