Thailand Convention & Exhibition Bureau (TCEB)

City Data Intelligence: When Urban Data Becomes a New Competitive Advantage for Thailand’s MICE Cities

In today’s MICE industry, competition is no longer defined only by venue size or the number of meeting rooms. Cities that can use data to plan, make decisions, and design experiences with greater precision are better positioned to gain a competitive advantage.

When Urban Data Becomes a New Competitive Advantage for Thailand’s MICE Cities

In an era where competition in the MICE industry is no longer measured solely by the size of event venues or the number of meeting rooms, cities that can use data to plan, make decisions, and design experiences with greater precision are more likely to gain a competitive advantage over cities that rely only on past experience or fragmented historical data.

The concept of City Data Intelligence is therefore becoming increasingly important for the development of MICE Cities. Urban data is no longer merely a set of numbers in a report. It can become a strategic tool that helps cities understand their own potential, identify the needs of event organisers, understand participant behaviour, and discover new opportunities to attract international meetings, exhibitions, festivals, and events.

For Thailand, this direction aligns with TCEB’s ongoing efforts to drive the Thai MICE industry towards a Data & Innovation-Driven MICE Industry. This includes supporting the use of digital technology, data, and innovation in the event organising process in order to enhance efficiency, elevate experiences, and strengthen the global competitiveness of Thai entrepreneurs.

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What Is City Data Intelligence?

City Data Intelligence is the concept of integrating and analysing urban data together with MICE industry data to support more accurate policy and business decision-making at the city level.

In simple terms, City Data Intelligence is not merely about having a dashboard or a data collection system. It is about a city’s ability to transform data into understanding and turn that understanding into better decision-making.

Relevant data may cover a wide range of dimensions, including data on the number and types of MICE events held in the city, participant behaviour, spending patterns, event venues, hotels, transportation, mobility systems, the city’s economy, target industries, sustainability, safety, risk management, and satisfaction among event organisers, participants, and communities.

When these data sets are analysed together, a city will no longer know only how many events took place. It will be able to answer deeper questions, such as what types of events the city should attract, which markets have high potential, which periods are most suitable for event hosting, what limitations the city faces, and how MICE events can create economic, social, and environmental impacts.

Why Data Matters for Modern MICE Cities

In the past, MICE Cities may have competed mainly on the readiness of event venues, hotels, or transportation. Today, however, modern MICE Cities must compete through the strength of their overall urban ecosystem, including infrastructure, human resources, safety, sustainability, city image, and the ability to meet the needs of event organisers.

Data is a tool that enables cities to see this bigger picture more clearly.

If a city has reliable data, it can assess its own strengths, identify which industry sectors it should target, determine which infrastructure should be developed, and design city packages that better respond to the needs of event organisers.

Conversely, without a reliable data system, a city may make decisions based on assumptions or incomplete information. This can result in investment, marketing, and urban development that do not align with the actual needs of the MICE market.

This is why City Data Intelligence should be viewed as a new form of infrastructure for MICE Cities, no less important than roads, airports, convention centres, or hotels. Data is what enables cities to think systematically and compete with clear direction.

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From MICE Data Platform to City Data Intelligence

One of the key tools in driving MICE through data is the MICE Data Platform. It is a data system for the MICE industry that covers information such as the number of events, revenue, participants, participant behaviour, international convention potential, exhibition data, and macroeconomic factors. It also provides dashboards, insight reports, and a data catalog for analytical use.

Strategically, the MICE Data Platform helps shift the way the industry views data from retrospective reporting to forward-looking planning. This includes assessing target markets, designing city promotion campaigns, supporting entrepreneurs, and improving participant experiences.

Viewed as a progression, the MICE Data Platform can be seen as a key data foundation for the MICE industry, while City Data Intelligence is the process of connecting that data with urban data to enable better decision-making at the local level.

For example, a city may have data on how many conferences are held each year, which participant groups attend, and how much revenue is generated. However, when this data is connected with urban data, such as transportation, hotels, event spaces, urban density, and the capacity of local entrepreneurs, the city can analyse more deeply and determine which types of events best match its potential.

City Data Platform as the Foundation of Smart Cities

The concept of City Data Intelligence is also directly connected to the development of smart cities.

A City Data Platform functions as an urban data platform that helps city administrators use data for policymaking, enables developers to design appropriate technical systems, and helps citizens better understand the role of data in urban development.

When this concept is applied to the MICE industry, MICE Cities will not view data only through the lens of event organisation. Instead, they will view data as a tool for urban management, including transportation planning, crowd management, area management, energy consumption, waste management, and the design of public services that support both event participants and local residents.

In other words, the City Data Platform is the foundation of an urban data system, while City Data Intelligence is the analytical and decision-making layer that turns such data into real outcomes.

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What Data Should MICE Cities Use?

To make City Data Intelligence practical and easy to apply, MICE Cities may categorise their data into six key areas.

1. MICE market demand data

This type of data helps cities understand which types of events take place in the area, who the participants are, which countries they come from, how they spend, and which markets show growth potential.

2. City supply data

This includes data on event venues, hotels, meeting rooms, service providers, transportation systems, human resources, and related entrepreneurs. It helps assess which types and sizes of events the city is ready to support.

3. Transportation and mobility data

Data on airports, roads, rail systems, public transportation, and intra-city mobility helps cities plan routes, transfers, and crowd movement more effectively.

4. Economic and spending data

This data helps cities assess the economic impact of events, such as revenue generated for hotels, restaurants, local businesses, employment, and related tax contributions.

5. Sustainability data

This includes data on energy, water, waste, carbon emissions, and sustainability-certified entrepreneurs. It helps MICE Cities develop in line with ESG principles and meet the expectations of the international market.

6. Social and community data

This data helps cities assess how MICE events benefit local communities, how income is distributed locally, and how citizens participate in the development of MICE Cities.

When these six types of data are connected, cities can formulate more precise strategies, from selecting target event segments and designing experiences to evaluating post-event outcomes.

Examples of How City Data Intelligence Can Support MICE City Development

City Data Intelligence can be applied at multiple levels, from urban planning and marketing to real event management and post-event evaluation.

At the planning level, cities can use data to assess which infrastructure should be developed first, such as expanding event spaces, improving transportation systems, or developing human resources in hospitality and event services.

At the marketing level, cities can use data to create clearer city profiles. For example, one city may be positioned as suitable for wellness events, another for smart agriculture, and another for the creative economy, rather than communicating broadly that the city is ready to host events.

At the bidding level, cities can use data to strengthen the credibility of proposals, such as presenting hotel capacity, transportation routes, supplier readiness, projected economic impact, and sustainability measures.

At the event management level, cities can use data to manage crowd flow, transportation, safety, waste, and visitor experience with evidence-based support. At the post-event level, cities can use data to measure how much economic value an event has generated, how income has been distributed to local businesses, and whether the event has enhanced the city’s image in the long term.

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Good Data Must Come with Governance

Although data has strong potential, City Data Intelligence cannot be developed sustainably without a clear system of data governance.

Cities should have shared data standards and understand who owns the data, who has the right to use it, which data can be disclosed, which data must be protected, and which data is related to the privacy of citizens or event participants.

This issue is particularly important because urban data involves many stakeholders, including the public sector, private sector, event organisers, entrepreneurs, communities, and citizens. The use of data must therefore build trust that the data is being used for public benefit and urban development, not in ways that create risks to privacy or security.

Challenges of City Data Intelligence

Although City Data Intelligence has strong potential, its practical implementation still faces several challenges.

The first challenge is that much data remains separated across different agencies. For example, tourism data may be held by one agency, transportation data by another, hotel and venue data by the private sector, while economic or environmental data may be held by local authorities.

The second challenge is that some cities may have dashboards but still lack people who can translate data into policy or concrete action plans.

The third challenge is that some data has not yet been designed for interoperability. Definitions may differ, formats may be inconsistent, or data may not be updated regularly.

Therefore, MICE Cities that wish to develop City Data Intelligence should invest simultaneously in technology, data standards, human resources, and governance.

TCEB’s Opportunity as a Connector of Data, Cities, and Industry

City Data Intelligence opens an opportunity for TCEB to position itself beyond the role of an agency that promotes event hosting. TCEB can also serve as a connector of data, knowledge, cities, and entrepreneurs.

In this context, TCEB can play three key roles: platform owner, knowledge broker, and strategic enabler.

As a platform owner, TCEB can support data infrastructure for the MICE industry. As a knowledge broker, it can help translate data into insights that cities and entrepreneurs can understand and apply. As a strategic enabler, it can help cities use data to enhance readiness, attract high-quality events, and create measurable economic, social, and sustainability impacts.

City Data Intelligence Is the Next Step for Thailand’s MICE Cities

City Data Intelligence is the next step in the development of Thailand’s MICE Cities. It enables cities to view MICE not merely as occasional activities, but as part of a broader urban development strategy.

Cities that know how to use data will be able to identify better opportunities, reduce risks, design more relevant experiences, and demonstrate clearer economic, social, and sustainability outcomes.

In the future, the most competitive MICE Cities may not be those with the most data, but those that can transform data into the best decisions.

This is why City Data Intelligence should be regarded as one of the essential foundations of Thailand’s next-generation MICE Cities.

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