Evening gathering at Son Moix stadium with professionals and football fans networking over coffee and local snacks

Between Coffee Stall and Business Lounge: RCD Mallorca Launches Business Club for the Island

Son Moix in the evening: RCD Mallorca has launched a business club that brings small and medium-sized enterprises together with football fans. Networking, sustainability and concrete cooperation opportunities for gastronomy and tourism are the focus.

Between Coffee Stall and Business Lounge: Football as a Connector on Mallorca

Last night the main street smelled of grilled pinchos and fresh coffee while the floodlights of Son Moix slowly came on. It wasn't a typical match day, but there was still a stadium atmosphere: men in suits waited next to neighbors in jerseys, construction workers talked with hotel managers, and you could hear the murmur of greetings everywhere — Mallorca vibrating. The occasion: the presentation of the new RCD Mallorca Business-Club by RCD Mallorca, a project that aims to bring sport, business and everyday island life together.

The special thing about it: the club deliberately aims to be down-to-earth. No elite boxes with brass buttons, but an offer that is open to small cafés, craft businesses and startups as well as established companies. Meetings are planned to take place on the last Thursday of the month — a time that fits well into the work routine and invites relaxed exchanges after work. Many came directly from offices, some from workshops, and all gathered on the narrow promenade of the stands where you usually consume stadium sausages and professional conversations at the same time.

More than photos with celebrities: clear topics, concrete formats

Of course the presence of guests like Toni Nadal drew attention — a photo, a sentence, and the event is already on social channels. But the organizers did not rely only on well-known names. The program featured clear topics: innovation, sustainability and modern management. And not just as buzzwords: planned are impulse talks, panel discussions, short pitch rounds and practical reports from entrepreneurs who have already implemented flagship projects on the island.

For gastronomy and tourism there are immediately recognisable opportunities. A café owner said she hoped to receive catering orders for club events in the future. Others spoke of joint promotion campaigns at home games or of supply-chain partnerships that could bring local products more into the spotlight. The nice thing is: it’s about visible everyday perspectives — jobs, guests, income — not just discussion rounds in airy conference rooms.

What members can expect concretely

The program is practice-oriented: networking evenings in the stadium, workshops on digitalisation, sustainability checks for local businesses and presentation spaces at home games. Membership models were also discussed — different tiers that could range from simple industry meetups to IKONO Premium Club lounge at Son Moix. What seems important to me personally is the openness: when a small craft business can appear alongside a tourism company, the best ideas often emerge.

Another plus: the club uses the RCD Mallorca brand as a door opener. The trust the club enjoys among many island residents — whether through local youth development or sponsorship — can accelerate business relationships. At the same time the business community can give something back to the club: know-how, services and local products that become visible on matchdays and beyond.

Of course there are challenges: pricing, real added value for smaller companies and the question of how to make sustainability truly measurable. But the overall mood was optimistic and practically minded. Instead of big promises it was about small, well-thought-out steps — a caterer here, a joint marketing action there.

For Mallorca the experiment could be a nice complement to the usual tourism and economic policy. Football stadiums are meeting places with a high emotional connection; if you use them, networks can form that create not only revenue but also ideas and responsibility. If the club now remains transparent, pays attention to affordable offers for small businesses and regularly communicates concrete success stories, it has a good chance of becoming more than a PR project.

I will be there again at the next “last Thursday” — not for the gossip, but for the conversations at the edge of the stands, the soft clink of glasses and the smell of freshly brewed coffee. And who knows: maybe this very mix of stadium spirit and pragmatic networking will provide the next impetus for a small island project with a big effect.

Details: Regular meetings: last Thursday of the month; Location: Son Moix; Topics: innovation, sustainability, management; Formats: talks, panels, pitch rounds, practical examples.

Frequently asked questions

What is the new RCD Mallorca Business Club at Son Moix?

The RCD Mallorca Business Club is a networking project that brings together sport, business and everyday island life in Mallorca. It is designed to create practical connections between local companies, from small cafés and workshops to larger businesses, with regular meetings at Son Moix.

When do the RCD Mallorca Business Club meetings take place?

The meetings are planned for the last Thursday of each month, which makes them easier to fit into the normal work routine. The format is meant to feel relaxed and practical, with time for conversation after work.

Who can join the RCD Mallorca Business Club?

The club is intended to be open rather than exclusive, with room for small cafés, craft businesses, startups and established companies. The idea is to mix different kinds of local activity in Mallorca so that useful contacts can form across sectors.

What topics will the RCD Mallorca Business Club focus on?

The planned topics include innovation, sustainability and modern management. The format also includes impulse talks, panel discussions, short pitch rounds and practical examples from entrepreneurs working on the island.

Why is football being used for business networking in Mallorca?

Football clubs in Mallorca have a strong emotional connection with local people, which makes them natural meeting points. RCD Mallorca is using that trust and visibility to help companies connect in a setting that feels more familiar than a formal conference room.

Is the RCD Mallorca Business Club useful for small businesses?

Yes, the club seems designed with smaller businesses in mind, not just large companies. It could help them meet potential clients, find partners and get visibility through stadium events, shared promotions or catering opportunities.

What kind of activities will take place at Son Moix through the business club?

The club plans networking evenings, workshops on digitalisation, sustainability checks for local companies and presentation spaces during home games. It is meant to be practical, with activities that can support real business relationships in Mallorca.

Can the RCD Mallorca Business Club help local tourism and hospitality businesses?

That is one of the areas with immediate potential, especially for cafés, restaurants, hotels and suppliers in Mallorca. The club could lead to catering orders, joint marketing actions and stronger visibility for local products on matchdays.

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