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Living in Scotland - Neil Fitzgerald December
"We're just so
busy."
Over the last few days, the same phrase keeps cropping
up in my regular phone-rounds and catch-ups over
coffee with business people in Scotland. And it's
usually in a slightly disbelieving tone.
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Neil Fitzgerald
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After all, this is less than 14 shopping days to Christmas.
Now there is still a vague tradition that for the Scots
Christmas isn't the big event of the festive season, it's
the New Year or Hogmanay (old Scottish word for New Year's
Eve, derivation uncertain). Nowadays, however, the Yule
tide has definitely turned. In recent years, just like everywhere
else, working life in Scotland has seemed to wind down rapidly
from the first week of December onwards, amid office parties,
surreptitious sneaking out to buy presents, and the rest
of the rapidly snowballing seasonal activities. Even those
maintaining a certain self-discipline would find no option
but to wind down too as no-one else seemed to be around
to do business with.
Until this year. Suddenly,
the flow of new launches, deals, projects and initiatives
from al directions looks like going on right up to 24
December. And the way my contacts are talking, many of
them will be back on the case immediately after.
Festive Fever
Be assured, though, Scotland in December is nowhere near
retreating into some grim, workaholic trance. Across Edinburgh's
Princes Street Gardens from the Castle, a 140-foot Ferris
Wheel twirls above the now-traditional fairground and
open-air ice rink, while on the Mound between Princes
Street and the Old Town escarpment a full traditional
German night-time market has been in full sway. Glasgow's
own open-air ice rink and fairground has genereted even
more winter light and noise in George Square for passing
shoppers and party-goers.
The live pop and rock venues
have been vibrating to music old and new (Beautiful South,
Foo Fighters, Steps, the Bootleg Beatles) while Scotland's
vibrant club scene continues to roll out new regular nights
and specials for everything from hi-hop and house to Latin
and jazz. On a more refined note, amid a whole gamut of
classical and Christmas-oriented concerts by Scotland's
world-class orchestras - the Royal Scottish National Orchestra,
Scottish Chamber Orchestra, BT Scottish Ensemble and -
just back from a historic tour of China -BBC Scottish
Symphony Orchestra - came the Vienna Philharmonic. With
a name that belies its professionalism, Opera On A Shoestring
is taking its stripped-down versions of operatic favourites
round the local communities in Glasgow, just as big brother
Scottish Opera opened its new production of Madama Butterfly
to rapturous reviews by the UK-wide press. Meanwhile,
the big opera event in Edinburgh was the charity concert
by Jose Carreras inaugurating the city's Usher Hal after
its £9 million refurbishment.
All this, even before Madonna
arrives for her wedding in the Highland surroundings of
Dornoch in Sutherland on 22 December....
Taking Off
Still, Scotland is doing the business, not least in electronics
and information technology. One the one hand, a supply
chain management and e-procurement conference in Glasgow
heard that the Scottish business-to-business market will
double next year to £5 billion, roughly 3 per cent of
the global total. On the other, a training industry report
found that Scotland now has a disproportionate percentage
of the UK's electronics workforce, and that overseas companies
are looking to Scotland as the best base in the UK, building
on its traditional engineering skills and innovation as
a way to resolve an increasing worldwide shortage of skilled
workers in a booming sector. The recent announcement by
system-on-chip solutions provider Simutech of Portland,
Oregon that it was setting up its European Headquarters
within the Alba Centre was the latest example of this
inward investment trend at the high-level, R&D end.
Home-grown electronics, IT
and opto-electronics businesses continue to proliferate.
Scotland's own First Tuesday network is now a well-established,
integral part of matching entrepreneurs and funders, and
this month saw the first Female Finance Finding event,
in Glasgow, where the best woman-led start-ups were coached
in pitching before being introduced to a fast-expanding,
new-technology-oriented business angel and venture capital
community.
The supply of premises and
facilities for all these different types of businesses,
inward-invested and local, is also keeping up. The next
phase of the Alba Campus site, extending the choice of
premises available there, is on target for April. Meanwhile,
at Hillington to the West of Glasgow another business
incubation centre offering premises to high-tech, high-growth
start-ups in Scotland was opened. Next door, around Glasgow
International Airport, a flurry of developments are on
the table for those businesses needing to be close to
air cargo facilities as well as freight handlers themselves.
Similar conceptualising and land clearing is going on
for expanding cargo operations around Edinburgh, Prestwick
and Aberdeen airports.
Talking of air connections,
competition continues notably from smaller, feisty budget
airlines such as Ryanair, easyJet and Go with even more
low-cost, new direct routes opening up between Scotland
and London and Europe. Among the latest are Go's Glasgow-London
Stansted flights and, from 7 January, EasyJet's twice-a-day
Edinburgh-Amsterdam.
Hogmanay this year offers
new as well as traditional reasons for being around Scotland.
Some of the rituals are well nigh buried in time: for
instance, a late New Year's Eve parade of 60 men through
Stonehaven, near Aberdeen, each swinging a blazing ball
of pitch on the end of a chain round their heads before
launching them into the sea. Or next day there's the Orkney
Ba' Game, with 200 men split into two teams each fighting
to move a leather ball up or down a main street in Kirkwall
- in all the chaotic fun, who cares who wins?
Of course the big Hogmanay
events are in the big cities. This year Edinburgh's got
even bigger. As if 31 December wasn't enough, there's
the Night Afore Fiesta with a march to pipes and drums
down from the Royal Mile into the New Town for street
theatre, a ceilidh and Afro-Caribbean music. New Year's
Eve then sees the real Street Party, with live music from
around the world played at various points on Princes Street,
while for the first time fireworks displays will be staged
from seven hillpoints around the city.
Glasgow, not to be outdone,
has a fireworks display by the people who last year lit
up the Eiffel Tower, as seen on TV screens around the
world, forming the highpoint of a Riverside Spectacular
and the unveiling of the new Glasgow Tower at the Glasgow
Science Centre on the Clyde. Then everyone heads for the
streets of Glasgow's centre, where thousands of clubbers
will join the BBC's Millennium Dance Party in George Square
while elsewhere under the night sky top Glasgow DJs share
record deck stints and there's live gospel, salsa, and
rock music and international street theatre until the
early morning hours. After which I somehow feel everyone
will want a couple of days off before 2001 gets really
busy again....
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