After all, for trade and thus for the fair, it's about foregrounding the emotional shopping experience and offering "shoppable stories", according to Uherek. When looking at the online trade it's clear: "The stationary trade has a major advantage in terms of experience."
It's going to need it too. Because even though the customer can only touch, see and test products in a physical business, rapidly progressing digitalisation means that frequency will decline in future, despite increasing urbanisation. The consequence: "It's no longer about 'location, location, location', but instead 'customer, customer, customer' is increasingly becoming the main focus". That's why the stationary trade wants to play out its advantage and offer customers a wow-effect at POS in order to face up to the question which Uherek formulates as: "How can emotion, convenience and experience be implemented - square metre for square metre?"
More specifically, it will consist of three pop-up stores for the three types of buyer: the experience-, convenience- and service- orientated shopper. The three show stores demonstrate how the different trade types can be targeted to these types of buyer.
Represented in the supporting programme once more are also the Christmasworld trends, "even…