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Survey data from public administrations and professional associations reveal a wide
range of capacity building
initiatives in education, support for online services (e.g. social marketing, website support, e-marketing and so
on), which generally address the obstacles and difficulties identified in the SME survey.
Education and consultation activities offered by public administrations and professional associations can respond
to the difficulties faced by SMEs by providing information to:
•
Understand the extend, nature, size of the problem encountered by SMEs at either individual or collective
levels;
•
Assist in decision making by providing knowledge, decision support tools, and frameworks to assist
SMEs and other stakeholders better appreciate the choices available and the strengths, weaknesses,
costs and benefits of those options;
•
Understand the transformational changes taking place at macro levels and how this can be translated
into being relevant for SMEs.
While the actions of the public administrations and professional associations broadly address some of the
challenges reported by the tourism SMEs, it appears that initiatives are performed in a relatively fragmented way,
targeting specific needs and challenges of the SMEs in specific locations, and /or lead by dynamic individuals.
There is a need to share understandings about what initiatives work best in what kinds of SMEs, in what
locations/contexts, and to delve deeper and evaluate more rigorously the broad categories of actions included
under education, consultation, and capacity building initiatives.
Interview data tends to support the need for more depth and
coherence around the types of actions and initiatives, so that public
administrations and professional associations can learn and better
understand how to fine tune their work. Importantly several actors
identified the enduring importance of face-to-face sharing of
experiences, challenges and successes
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.
Is there a gap between the support provided and the needs of the industry?
The analysis of open-ended qualitative data (Section 5.0: Summary of key issues) identifies five key clusters of
concern that highlight the managerial (i.e. strategic and operational) issues faced by SMEs. These issues capture
the difficulties, pressures, insecurities, trade-offs, and challenges that SMEs encounter in managing their
businesses and in making decisions about digitalisation. The pressure to digitalisation is one of many confronting
SMEs who have limited resources, time, and often, bounded expertise.
•
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