Home Education Editorial Damp Squib: DIDAC India 2025 & DIDAC Skills 2025 Fail to Build a Narrative

Damp Squib: DIDAC India 2025 & DIDAC Skills 2025 Fail to Build a Narrative

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The recently concluded three-day DIDAC India 2025, the 15th edition of India’s flagship education exhibition organised by the India Didactics Association (IDA), ended not with the promised bang but with what can best be described as a damp squib. Despite the grand announcement of the debut edition of DIDAC Skills 2025 and the association’s claims of participation by “over 500 global brands” from “more than 40 countries,” the event held from 18–20 November in Delhi barely registered in public consciousness. No headlines, no conversations, and hardly any ripple across the education or skilling sector.

At the heart of this subdued response lies a larger, structural failing: the event never built a compelling narrative, either for the public or even for the industry it sought to serve.

A Closed-Door Summit That Closed Out the Press

A key reason for DIDAC’s muted impact was the concurrent hosting of The International Education & Skills Summit (TIESS), positioned as the knowledge backbone of the exhibition. Yet TIESS was, for all practical purposes, a closed-door assembly, with media access significantly restricted. Most sessions featured speakers who were also paying exhibitors—raising the question of whether the summit was designed more as an incentive package for commercial participants rather than a platform for genuine thought leadership.

By shutting out press visibility, the organisers appeared to shut down the very oxygen needed to fuel public interest and narrative-building around the event.

Government Presence: A Show of Absence

Government participation, usually a staple at large education and skill development exhibitions—often in the form of sparsely staffed stalls and standard-issue pavilions—was particularly underwhelming this year. More telling, however, was the absence of senior leadership.

Neither Union Skills Minister Jayant Chaudhary nor any top representatives from the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC), the Skill India Mission, or other key ministries made an appearance. At a time when the skills landscape is undergoing policy churn and industry recalibration, this absence sends a clear signal of poor planning, misaligned priorities, and a surprising lack of media literacy by the organisers.

Pavilions Without Partnerships

While the presence of Australian, German, and a few Sector Skill Council (SSC) pavilions added pockets of credibility, the event failed to deliver on the much-needed outcome-driven agenda. Large exhibitions thrive not only on displays but on partnership announcements, MoUs, new initiatives, and government–industry signalling—none of which emerged with any significance from DIDAC 2025.

The result was an exhibition heavy on showcasing and exploration, but thin on commitments, collaborations, or innovation pipelines.

A Host City Unmoved

Perhaps the most striking indicator of the event’s lacklustre impact was the response from its host ecosystem. Delhi and its neighbouring regions, home to some of India’s most vibrant education, training, and technical institutions, were scarcely visible among the visitors. If the event could not attract its natural audience located next door, it raises serious questions about outreach, positioning, and relevance.

The Larger Lesson

DIDAC India 2025 and DIDAC Skills 2025 set out to shape conversations around education and skilling, but ultimately failed to frame even their own narrative. In an era where events depend as much on storytelling, inclusivity, and communication strategy as on scale, IDA’s reliance on numbers over substance proved costly.

Without thought leadership, without strategic participation, without visibility—and without a story—this year’s DIDAC was not the transformative industry milestone it aspired to be. It remained, instead, a damp squib, offering a cautionary tale for the future of education and skilling exhibitions in India.

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