China (Shanghai) Boat Show Comes of Age - and a Year Early!
SHANGHAI, May 4, 2012 /PRNewswire-Asia/ -- Usually one is considered to come of age at 18 but the China (Shanghai) International Boat Show (CIBS) appears to have achieved that a year early.
In its 17th rendition CIBS's move to the former World Expo 2010 site which was brought on by the need to move to larger premises has given the show a new character, a new feeling of being an event rather than having exhibitors crammed in wherever there was space; a whole new experience for the visitor, largely under one roof, which no other show, certainly not in China, has so far come close to replicating. What a good move it has proved to be for every reason imaginable.
Figures are just in and they show turnover up a remarkable 120% to 2.2 Bn RMB with overseas visitors up 50%, although they were responsible for a small fraction of the boat sales. That figure was helped along quite nicely by Sunseeker who sold one 40m yacht for a cool RMB 140M.
Overall visitor numbers were 31,835, up a massive 40% over 2011 and with every visitor pass being bar coded and electronically scanned these figures are completely accurate and 3rd party audited. Then again, with a 40% increase no hype is required; the numbers speak for themselves.
So there is absolutely no doubt that the move to the new venue at the World Expo site has not just been a "nice" move; it has been commercially successful for the organizers in terms of ticket sales and visitor numbers and also for the exhibitors, with most boats displaying a Sold sticker before the end of the show.
The high recorded visitor numbers are not surprising. From the moment the doors opened to the public right after the opening ceremony on the Friday long queues formed for admission to the event. It was packed with visitors, at times making it very difficult to get from one part of the venue to another.
Those numbers didn't seem to diminish at any point during the show all the way through to when the exhibitors started packing up on the Sunday afternoon. The new venue was busy, at times to the point of being crowded.
All this at a venue that was 31% larger than the previous year and yet still with virtually all the exhibition space sold out.
The exhibition space was very little "non-boats". There were a handful (literally) of cars and luxury products -just around 5 or 6- with all the other 500 or so exhibitors being boats, boat bits or boat related.
And it was not just the number of visitors. The exhibition had a definite wow factor (a direct quote from more than one independent visitor by the way), a buzz and a vibrancy about it with words and phrases like "what a difference", "it is so big" or "just incredible" being used by visitors when asked for their opinion.
There is little doubt that the China (Shanghai) International Boat Show is comfortably the largest boat show in Asia by virtually any measure, and has attracted the public's interest or, more relevantly, the buying public's interest. Most of the boats had a very encouraging word stuck on them by the end of the show: "Sold". So with nigh on 500 boats being exhibited, that is quite a few new boat users about to launch onto the seas, rivers and lakes of China.
And running behind the public gaze the additional elements such as the industry forums, the Charity Regatta and the Asian Marine & Boating Awards were all well attended and received, a complete event in one of China's wealthiest cities. Not all the visitors were local as surveys being run by the organizers ascertained that the visitors were indeed not just Shanghainese but from all over China.
SOURCE Shanghai UBM Sinoexpo International Exhibition Co.,Ltd.
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