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Ipex 2014 Continues to Take Shape

Press release from the issuing company

Ipex 2014 Director Trevor Crawford issued the following statement today:

We are writing to you to clearly set out our position regarding Ipex 2014 and our plans for the future.

We all understand that print is experiencing some change - economic, technological, social, and environmental. Events that represent print - such as Ipex - have to adapt and reflect those shifts.

When an event takes place every four years, that degree of change can appear dramatic. In fact, it's simply that a cyclical event like this pulls together the incremental changes that happened over that time period and concentrates them into one experience.

Industries that are in flux have to re-evaluate themselves. They need to be brave and find the clarity to focus on what is valuable and should be developed. This is exactly what our customers and their customers are doing. The same goes for us as an event brand.

Ipex will take place in London in 2014. We stand firmly by our mission: to provide today's printer and their customers with the ideas, insights and solutions to effectively promote the power of print and its integration in the marketing mix.

As always, we're putting commercial printers right at the heart of Ipex. We surveyed more than 1600 printers worldwide to ask them how Ipex could continue to be relevant to their needs. They told us:

*       We're channelling major capital investment into digital and post press, to complement what we have already.
*       We're keen to embrace opportunities in new applications, especially packaging.
*       We want to understand more about how print works in multichannel marketing.
*       We need our customers to understand more about what print can do for them.

We've taken that research on board to shape our planning. We're committed to delivering an event that will help printers from all over the world to adapt to these changes and build for the future. Ipex will be the only event in 2014 that brings together the whole international print supply chain to learn, network and do business.

We said we'd focus the show on digital: some have interpreted that to mean Ipex will no longer serve litho printers. Nothing could be further from the truth. We expect 80% of our visitors to be commercial printers, whether they print litho, digital, or with a mix of complementary processes. Most successful printers don't define themselves by the type of press they operate.

Printers are looking to Ipex for vital leadership and guidance. They need a neutral environment, not controlled by a single manufacturer, where they can find the time and space to assess and absorb the changes and opportunities around them. We will provide them with a wealth of world-class content through initiatives such as the World Print Summit.

Ipex is a year away. We're working to deliver an event that gives printers what they need, while also attracting the people who buy print, and showing them what print is capable of, working hand in hand with other communications channels.

Ipex has print at its heart. If you do too, then you'll be at Ipex 2014.

Sincerely,

Trevor Crawford

Executive Director, Ipex 2014

Discussion

By Paul Gardner on Mar 22, 2013


Wow! I'm IMPRESSED!

I've not recently seen a better summary of today's World of Print, nor a more compelling pitch for why one should attend ANY Print Show.

I especially like the clear argument for why Demo Centers and manufacturer-hosted events aren't a replacement for Trade Shows…

"(Printers) need a neutral environment, not controlled by a single manufacturer, where they can find the time and space to assess and absorb the changes and opportunities around them."

I've got just one suggestion for the organizers of IPEX…

Since many of the largest traditional exhibitors are bailing out of IPEX, why not focus some love and attention at the other end of the spectrum - on the smallest companies?

Work to create an attractive opportunity for the mom & pop shops, the startups, the oddballs and crackpots that so often provide a critical piece of the puzzle to the most innovative printers among us.

Go out of your way to court the little companies that often can't afford a presence at a trade show, but that have SOMETHING of VALUE to share with it's audience.

Why not take some of the space that HP & Heidelberg will apparently leave vacant and create a Printer's Flea Market or Street Bazaar where the price of a small table and a single banner is not much more than the cost of airfare and a cab?

Such an approach could be the start of something remarkable!

 

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