And the result has been outstanding so far: a 112 percent increase in attendance, 47.8 percent increase in foreign buyers and 176.7 percent increase in local buyers compared to the April 2011 edition.
“There is no design direction yet. We are busy doing profitability for this show. It’s not about innovation. These are traditional designs we’ve been doing for years,” said Rosvi Gaetos, executive director of the Center for International Trade Expositions and Missions (Citem), the export promotions arm of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), and organizer of the Manila FAME Int’l.
“The competition for a buyer is really stiff. Competition among trade shows is so fierce, one trade show is killing the other. Manila FAME had to reposition and re-brand. If they continue to do things on their own, they will die a natural death,” Gaetos said.
Bloomingdale’s, which abandoned the show some years ago, is back, and so is Spain’s El Corte Ingles, Gaetos said. Big buyers from the US include Walmart, Hallmark Cards, Crate & Barrel, Roost, Kalalou, Leahy Global Resources, Natori Company, and Material ConneXion, United Kingdom’s Marks and Spencer, Australia’s Freedom, Canada’s Rona Inc. and Enesco, Regalo Fama, and many others from Japan, Taiwan, India, South Korea, Sweden, Singapore, Turkey and Vietnam.
Cleghorn is a retail and product development leader in furniture and homeware, who has worked with Zak Designs, Sheridan, Disney Corp., Breville and more. Simpson handles product design, development, sourcing and licensing for home furnishings, decorative accessories, holiday trim, tabletops and fashion accessories.
Themes
Simpson created the “Trend Stores,” her vision of presenting the Manila FAME via trend approach, in three themes: Mood Indigo, Naturalist and Graffiti.
T’boli weavers of Lake Sebu, Mindanao, also exhibited spectacular designs from abaca and created tapestries called T’nalak.
Gaetos said that right now, the Philippines is the only country in the world using abaca. Abaca’s application is wide and varied, she said, although Filipinos have yet to master how to use it for garments. She hopes, too, that the country, as its first discoverer, will be able to market abaca products aggressively abroad.
“Cleghorn and Simpson brought in commercial—we will not create trend-setting products, we will create trend-now, trend-right products. Trend-setting may not sell, but trend-now, trend-right will sell and give the profits you want,” Gaetos said.
Pampanga One and Mindanao One also joined the 54th edition of Manila FAME. The show is still handling crafts, naturals, basics, art essentials and craftsmanship, Gaetos said. The summer edition will now primarily showcase furniture with a little home décor, gift and fashion accessories, while the last quarter show will feature more décor, gift and fashion accessories with a little furniture and home furnishing.