Corporate team building and corporate hospitality can contribute towards building successful teams. In today's dynamic business environment, where every action and outlay must deliver a result or affect a change, team building activities must be energising, motivating, engaging, but most of all effective.
From business orientated team building events, more formal corporate training, or mental and physical conference energisers, KDM's experience and expertise in team building in Glasgow will ensure your teams take back valuable skills and confidence from the events back to the workplace whilst having a little fun on the way.
Glasgow has a diversity of venues, both large and small to cater for a wide variety of team building events or your management conference. Event venues for corporate training, castles for corporate entertainment, country houses for new team building and business hotels for conference energisers. We understand that the hotel, conference centre or site chosen for your team building activity or corporate training experience is paramount in the event planning process. With over 19 years experience in the marketplace KDM have a wealth of knowledge of venues, sites and locations within Glasgow and are able to source the perfect location for your conferences and meetings and team building exercises. Conclude your corporate training in Glasgow by injecting a little innovation with one of KDM’s team building events. From indoor team building games to fun ice breakers our range of team building activities will add sparkle and panache to your team build.
Glasgow is the largest city in Scotland and third most populous in the United Kingdom. Fully named as the City of Glasgow, it is the most populous of Scotland's 32 unitary authority areas. The city is situated on the River Clyde in the country's west central lowlands. A person from Glasgow is known as a Glaswegian, which is also the name of the local dialect. Glasgow grew from the medieval Bishopric of Glasgow and the later establishment of the University of Glasgow, which contributed to the Scottish Enlightenment. From the 18th century the city became one of Europe's main hubs of transatlantic trade with the Americas. With the Industrial Revolution, the city and surrounding region grew to become one of the world's pre-eminent centres of engineering and shipbuilding, constructing many revolutionary and famous vessels. Glasgow was known as the "Second City of the British Empire" for much of the Victorian era. Today it is one of Europe's top twenty financial centres and is home to many of Scotland's leading businesses.In the late 19th and early 20th centuries Glasgow grew to a population of over one million, and was the fourth-largest city in Europe, after London, Paris and Berlin. In the 1960s, large-scale relocation to new towns and peripheral suburbs, followed by successive boundary changes, have reduced the population of the City.