MESSE FRANKFURT CELEBRATES ANNIVERSARY

Messe Frankfurt is celebrating the 100th anniversary of its international sales partner network

The global player now has a presence in 190 countries, creating an international network
with 30 subsidiaries and around 50 sales partners that is without equal in the German exhibition industry.
“The success of our global network structure can be seen in the fact that many of our foreign events are the second- or third-largest in their respective sectors worldwide – the largest being the corresponding flagship event at our Frankfurt base,” Messe Frankfurt President and Chief Executive Officer, Wolfgang Marzin, said.
“The importance of this international network to our company has also been underscored during the pandemic, because our foreign events have allowed us to generate revenues that were denied to us in Frankfurt.” 
Frankfurt’s international sales partners got their start in spring 1922, when the Genoa Economic and Financial Conference marked Germany’s return to the global marketplace following the end of the First World War.
For the first time, the catalogue for the International Frankfurt Fair listed international sales partners in 25 countries – most of which were located in Europe, such as in Italy and Switzerland.
Another eleven international sales partners were added within the space of five years, including an office in India. Back then, these partners still worked on an honorary basis, with their remuneration coming in the form of commissions on the stand rental fees that they generated.
Following the Spring Fair in 1929, International Frankfurt Fairs and the business with international sales partners were put on ice due to the global economic crisis.
In 1949 and 1950, however, new international sales partners were established in Australia, Denmark, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Switzerland and Turkey.  
Over the next 40 years, Messe Frankfurt continued to grow internationally, achieving two major milestones with its first trade fair outside Germany – Interstoff Asia in Hong Kong in 1987 – and the establishment of its first foreign subsidiary in Tokyo in 1990. Some of the company’s present-day subsidiaries started out as international sales partners, including the French subsidiary set up in 2002. 
Messe Frankfurt has been enjoying successful long-term relationships with its international sales partners for 100 years now.
These sales partners acquire customers locally, affording Messe Frankfurt access to industries, customers, ministries and associations in a wide range of countries. The result is a global network that continues to expand.
“Even in difficult times like during the global pandemic these past two years, we believe in the power of our international network,” Wolfgang said.
“That is because we believe in achieving international understanding through face-to-face interaction and the peaceful exchange of products and ideas. Countless long-term professional partnerships – and lasting friendships – have come into being at trade fairs.”

For more information, visit www.messefrankfurt.com