SME horizon

Refreshed alliance to deliver more targeted support for businesses 

Photo by Mikhail Nilov

More than 200 Trade Association and Chamber (TAC) and industry leaders gathered at the TAC Summit 2026 to strengthen collaboration and identify practical ways to help Singapore  businesses stay competitive in a more volatile global environment. 

At the Summit the refreshed TAC Alliance 2.0 was launched – an  enhanced execution-focused platform to deepen TAC capabilities, strengthen co-ordination across  TACs, and drive economy-wide transformation.  

From convening to execution 

Beyond aggregating voices and organising synergistic initiatives, the TAC Alliance 2.0 will  chart the next bound of TAC sector development and drive transformation of the TAC sector. This  will be done through three main thrusts: 

The TAC Alliance 2.0 will be led by a Steering Committee comprising experienced TAC  leaders, which provide strategic direction and ensure effective coordination of initiatives, including with the  Government, to drive TAC sector development. 

Mr Lee Chuan Teck, Chairman of EnterpriseSG said, “TACs are important partners in  driving enterprise and sectoral development. A strong TAC ecosystem provides critical support for  businesses to navigate an increasingly complex global environment

“The TAC Alliance 2.0 is an  important ground-up initiative by the TACs to collaborate on capability development and growth.  EnterpriseSG looks forward to working closely with the Alliance to better support the needs of our  enterprises.”

Raising capability and governance across TACs 

Two new initiatives were introduced to strengthen TAC capability building and governance:  

Why this matters now: NBS 2025 – Internationalisation Findings 

One focal area for TAC collaboration is internationalisation. SBF’s National Business Survey  (NBS) 2025 – Scaled Internationally Supplement show that while Singapore businesses remain  highly internationalised at 59%, expansion momentum has moderated from 59% in 2024 to 47% in  2025, amid rising uncertainty.

Key findings include:  

The survey also found that a large “stay-local” segment (40%) constrained more by capacity  and risk than lack of opportunity – highlighting a clear role for TACs to work together on sector specific market advisories, joint business missions and trade fairs participation. 

Mr Kok Ping Soon, CEO of SBF, said, “The NBS 2025 findings show that businesses are operating in a more volatile environment — expansion momentum has moderated, and firms are calling for practical support such as regulatory guidance, business matching and sharper market understanding.

“Beyond the mandate of TAC sector development, TAC Alliance 2.0 responds to this  broader reality as part of their objectives to foster cross-sectoral collaborations: it strengthens  coordination across TACs so we can move from convening to execution — helping companies build  capabilities, unlock partnerships and stay competitive.

“And when businesses are ready to go beyond Singapore, the same coordinated ecosystem can help them navigate overseas complexity  and scale with greater confidence.” 

The Summit also featured a Solutions Marketplace and Diagnostics Hub, connecting  TACs with curated solution providers and advisors in areas across human capital, digitalisation and  leadership development. 

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