Nuremberg International Toy Fair

The Nuremberg International Toy Fair (German: Spielwarenmesse) held annually since 1949, is the largest international trade fair for toys and games.[2] Only trade visitors associated with the toy business, journalists and invited guests are admitted. Each year during the course of the event which is held for six days, about 2,800 exhibitors from about 60 countries present their products.[1] In 2017, 73,000 trade visitors and purchasers from 123 countries came for the fair.[1] The fair is organized by Spielwarenmesse eG,[3] a marketing and trade fair service provider, based in Nuremberg, Germany.

Nuremberg International Toy Fair/Spielwarenmesse
StatusActive
GenreToys, Games
VenueMessezentrum
Location(s)Nuremberg
CountryGermany
Inaugurated1950
Attendance73,000 (2017)[1]
Organized bySpielwarenmesse eG
Websitehttps://www.spielwarenmesse.de/?L=1
Fair ground 2011
Toys go Green!

Range of products

Every year, about one million products are displayed on the fair, including approximately 70,000 new products. On the fair, they are presented in twelve different product groups. These are, as of the 2011 fair:

  • Model Construction, Hobbies
  • Model Railways and Accessories
  • Technical Toys, Educational toys, Action Toys
  • Dolls, Soft Toys,
  • Games, Books, Learning and Experimenting, Multimedia
  • Festive and Trend Articles, Carnival
  • Wooden Toys, Craftworks, Gifts
  • Arts& Crafts, Creative Design
  • Sports, Leisure, Outdoor
  • School Articles, Stationery
  • Baby & Infant Articles
  • Multi-product Group

ToyInnovation/ToyAward

The awarded products stand out due to their degree of innovation, product concept, creativity and playing idea. A jury of industry experts determines the winners in five categories (as of Spielwarenmesse International Toy Fair 2011):[4]

  • Baby&Infant
  • PreSchool
  • SchoolKids
  • Teenager&Family
  • SpecialAward (Topic changing annually)

Global Toy Conference

The Global Toy Conference takes place on the last day of the fair and deals with issues concerning the future of the toy trade and industry, e.g. sustainability, toy safety, online marketing and successful selling on the Internet.

gollark: I indent with a space, then a tab, then a randomly selected invisible Unicode character.
gollark: Better than the python one, at least.
gollark: Nim'ß.
gollark: I do NOT like this "solution" to "memory safety".
gollark: Accidental time zone reveal?

References

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