DIHBU will attend in person, together with the other partners, the project closing meeting and the final conference of the EAGLE consortium in Limerick (Ireland), to present the results of the project and discuss strategies for equipping small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) advanced digital skills.

The Project EAGLE will hold its final project closing meeting between partners and its final conference on 20 November 2025, under the theme «Bridging the digital skills gap – empowering SMEs for the future», at the University of Limerick.

The conference will be held in a hybrid way, allowing for face-to-face and online assistance, and will include sessions on digital transformation, educational innovation and SME support policies. Participants will be able to experience first-hand the training modules developed by the project, which seek to fill gaps in critical digital skills such as artificial intelligence, data analytics, cybersecurity or automation.

The meeting aims to boost the digitisation of European SMEs by encouraging collaboration between companies, educational establishments and public administrations. In addition, good practices and case studies will be presented, showing how some companies have already advanced on their path towards digital transformation thanks to the Project EAGLE.

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The main objective of the EAGLE project, in which it participates as a DIHBU partner, is to design and deliver high quality specialized training courses that reflect the latest developments in key capability areas (Cybersecurity, Big Data, Robotics, Blockchain and Smart Energy), supporting the development of people’s advanced digital skills in the workforce, with a focus on SMEs, for both managers and employees.
This project has received funding from the Digital Europe Programme (DIGITAL) with the identifier no 101100660. The views and opinions expressed in the draft are exclusively those of the author or authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the funding body. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.