Reflections from the Young Entrepreneurs Networking Event — The Mansion House, Dublin
By Pugazheanthi Palani, Founder of Napblog
On the evening of November 13th, under the historic wooden panels and soft lights of The Mansion House on Dawson Street, something powerful happened — entrepreneurs gathered not for competition, but for connection.
The Young Entrepreneurs Networking Event by Inner City Enterprise (ICE) brought together founders, dreamers, builders, and believers from across Dublin. And I had the privilege of attending as the Founder of Napblog, representing not just a company, but a vision:
to make marketing open-source, human, and accessible to everyone.
But this article isn’t about Napblog.
Tonight is about gratitude — and the people who make entrepreneurship possible.
1. The Atmosphere: History Meeting Ambition
Walking into The Mansion House — one of Dublin’s most historically rich buildings — instantly reminds you that leadership is not a modern invention. The room is lined with crests, flags, and legacy. Generations of public service, decisions, innovation, and trials have happened right within those walls.
And on this particular evening, that history met something equally powerful:
the future — young entrepreneurs.
The room felt timeless.
The conversations felt fresh.
The energy felt unstoppable.
ICE curated the perfect space: warm hospitality, intentional networking, meaningful introductions, and an environment where no one felt like a stranger.
2. The Honour of Meeting the Lord Mayor of Dublin
One of the most inspiring moments of the evening was hearing the address from:
Councillor Ray McAdam
Lord Mayor of Dublin (elected June 2025, 358th in office)
He delivered a message that every entrepreneur needed to hear — a reminder that:
- Entrepreneurship is not easy.
- Dublin values and celebrates young business builders.
- Resilience, community, and collaboration will shape the next generation of Irish innovation.
His presence was humble, approachable, and encouraging. After his speech, I had the opportunity to meet him personally — and take a photograph that I will value deeply.
He placed a hand on my shoulder and wished me the best with Napblog.
A small gesture — but one that carries the weight of encouragement that every entrepreneur needs.
To the Lord Mayor:
Thank you for inspiring us, for recognising young founders, and for reminding us that no entrepreneurial journey is too small to matter.
3. ICE Young Entrepreneurs Training Programme — A Lifeline for Builders
This event wasn’t just another networking night.
It was a reunion, a celebration, and a reminder of what ICE has created through the Young Entrepreneurs Training Programme.
ICE supports:
- Micro-business owners
- Early-stage founders
- Young entrepreneurs
- Social enterprise innovators
- Creatives and community builders
Their model is simple yet powerful:
Advice. Training. Mentorship. Human support.
No founder succeeds alone.
No idea grows in isolation.
ICE gives young entrepreneurs what most institutions overlook — confidence, context, and community.
To the ICE team:
Thank you for investing your time, resources, and heart into people who are still trying to find their way. Your impact is exponential — and it shows.
4. Guest Speaker Amanda Delaney — The Intersection of Marketing & Mindset
The evening also featured a talk by Amanda Delaney, a Marketing & Mindset Mentor. Her message hit home:
“Entrepreneurship is as much a mindset game as it is a strategy game.”
Amanda spoke with honesty, clarity, and rare authenticity.
Her message reminded us that:
- Founders must learn to manage fear.
- Marketing must feel like a conversation, not a performance.
- Your story is your most powerful asset.
Her presence brought grounded wisdom in a room full of ambition.
To Amanda:
Your words landed exactly where they were needed — thank you.
5. My Personal Reflection as a Founder
As the Founder of Napblog, attending this event went far beyond networking.
Napblog was built on the idea that marketing knowledge should be open-source, transparent, and accessible — especially in an era where AI is rewriting the rules.
But tonight reminded me of something deeper:
No level of technology replaces human community.
No algorithm replaces encouragement.
No data replaces presence.
Meeting fellow founders, hearing their challenges, celebrating their ideas, and learning about their journeys reinforced something I’ve always believed:
Entrepreneurship is a human story before it’s a business story.
I left the event not just with new contacts, but with renewed purpose.
6. Appreciation for the Event Organizers
Let me take a moment to express sincere gratitude to Inner City Enterprise:
- For recognising the importance of young entrepreneurs
- For creating inclusive programmes
- For giving us physical spaces to connect
- For building confidence in early-stage founders
- For contributing meaningfully to Dublin’s economic and creative landscape
Events like this create ripples that last for years.
7. Why Events Like This Matter — Beyond Business
Young entrepreneurs often battle:
- Self-doubt
- Isolation
- Burnout
- Financial pressure
- Lack of direction
- Limited support
But in one room, for two hours, ICE gave us the opposite:
- Belonging
- Encouragement
- Networks
- Visibility
- Mentorship
- Motivation
This is why events like this are priceless.
It’s not the wine or the nibbles — it’s the human connection.
8. The Importance of Dublin’s Entrepreneurial Ecosystem
Dublin is evolving quickly.
AI, startups, digital innovation, and creative industries are emerging with incredible speed.
But the city’s biggest strength is not technology — it’s community.
The entrepreneurial ecosystem here is:
- Friendly
- Collaborative
- Supportive
- Open-minded
- Ambitious
- Human-centered
And events like this reinforce that Dublin is not just a place to build businesses —
it’s a place to build dreams.
9. Key Moments I’ll Never Forget
✔ The Lord Mayor delivering a speech with sincerity and warmth
✔ Fellow entrepreneurs sharing their stories with courage
✔ Amanda Delaney’s message on mindset and authenticity
✔ Conversations that felt like mentorship
✔ The selfie moment — a symbol of possibility
✔ The sense of belonging in a room full of dreamers
Some nights become memories.
Some nights become fuel.
This one became both.
10. A Message to Young Entrepreneurs
If you are starting something — anything — remember:
- You don’t need to have everything figured out.
- You don’t need to come from privilege to build something meaningful.
- You don’t need to grow fast; you need to grow real.
- You don’t need to compare your chapter 1 to someone’s chapter 20.
The world doesn’t need more perfect founders.
The world needs more brave founders.
And bravery is simply this:
Show up — even when you’re unsure.
11. Gratitude & Closing Thoughts
To the Lord Mayor of Dublin, Councillor Ray McAdam —
Thank you for encouraging us and representing the city with dignity.
To ICE —
Your commitment to young entrepreneurs is shaping Dublin’s future.
To Amanda Delaney —
Your insights added depth, truth, and inspiration.
To every entrepreneur I met —
You reminded me why Napblog exists — to empower real people with real marketing knowledge.
And to Dublin —
Thank you for embracing founders like family.
Leaving the Mansion House that night, I didn’t just feel inspired —
I felt supported, recognised, and energised to keep building.
And that is the greatest gift any entrepreneur can receive.
12. Final Thought
Entrepreneurship is not a solo sport.
It is a community-driven, courage-fueled journey where every event, every conversation, and every encouraging word matters.
This event proved once again:
When you bring entrepreneurs together, you don’t just create networking — you create momentum.
And Dublin, you created exactly that.