Indeed, the industry contributed some 13 percent to the Italian GDP in 2017, as stated in the Italian Tourism Report issued in February by the Research Institute for Innovation and Development Services (IRiSS), a branch of the National Research Center (CNR).
Furthermore, it employed some 14.7 percent of the country's workforce, and was expected to register about 250,000 new hiring by 2023, according to a survey by the Florence-based Center for Tourism Studies (CST) unveiled at the fair.
Such survey also suggested that marketing, communication, and social media were the areas where managerial roles were more requested in the Italian market nowadays.
Such kind of clues would help the educational offers adjust accordingly, teachers explained.
"It happen more easily with the master, which in Italy is more flexible than the bachelor degree, and allow us to change some subjects of study every year," Alessandra Romano, director of the European University Master in Tourism Management, told Xinhua.
As such, in order to be in line with the market, the university would regularly discuss with its partners (entrepreneurs in the sector) the most needed figures and skills, and choose the topics consequently.
For example, according to the European University's teachers, an outdated role today was that related to reservation making, which was something going mostly online, or through touristic packages nowadays, while highly requested figures were revenue manager, food and beverage manager, and destination manager.
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