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 Greater London 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.
Greater London 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. Regardless of the style of the event venue chosen for your corporate team building activities – whether it be one of the specialist conference venues or one of the many meeting venues in Greater London - KDM will be able to use their 19 years of experience to ensure that your corporate events are not only successful but also runs to budget. Conclude your corporate training in Greater London 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.
Greater London is the top-level administrative subdivision covering London, England.[2] The administrative area was officially created in 1965 and covers the City of London (including Middle Temple and Inner Temple) and all 32 London boroughs. Its area also forms the London region of England and the London European Parliament constituency. The region has by far the highest GDP per capita in the United Kingdom. It covers 1579 km² (609 square miles) and had a 2006 mid-year estimated population of 7,512,400. It is bounded by the Home Counties of Essex and Hertfordshire in the East of England region and Buckinghamshire, Berkshire, Surrey and Kent in South East England. The highest point in Greater London is Westerham Heights, in the North Downs and on the boundary with Kent, at 245 metres (804 ft). The term Greater London was in use before 1965 to refer to a variously defined area, larger than the County of London and often similar to the Metropolitan Police District. Greater London is not a city in the proper sense that the word applies in the United Kingdom, that of being a status granted by the Crown. In addition, one of the London boroughs, Westminster, is already a city, as well as the City of London itself which would make such a status anomalous. Despite this, Greater London is commonly regarded as a city in the general sense of a municipality. A Lord Lieutenant of Greater London is appointed for its area, less the City of London, an area identical to the Metropolitan Police District, and for the purposes of the Lieutenancies Act 1997, this area is defined as a county. The term "London" is normally used in reference to Greater London or to the overall conurbation, but not often to the ancient, tiny City of London. Instead, this small area is often referred to simply as "the City" or "the Square Mile" and it forms the main financial district. Archaically the urbanised area of London was known as the Metropolis. In common usage, the terms "London" and "Greater London" are usually used interchangeably. It is officially divided for some purposes, with varying definitions, into Inner London and Outer London.
Have team building days as part of your management conference