Literature
Delhi World Book Fair to get bigger in 2016
New Delhi, Feb 16
The aggressive and smart
marketing and communication strategies of the organisers of the Delhi
World Book Fair 2015 have managed to hit the bull's eye when it comes to
footfalls, but the team is already "thinking big" for the next edition
where China will be the guest country at this annual
business-to-business event.
"You know when the country is China,
everything has to be big. They like going big, so wait for the next year
when everything will be big," Kumar Samresh, public relations officer
of the National Book Trust (NBT), told IANS.
The NBT in
association with the India Trade Promotion Organisation (ITPO) organises
this fair at Pragati Maidan. This year Singapore is the guest country
and South Korea is the focus country.
Without revealing many
details, Samresh told IANS that this year the organising team was
extremely aggressive to increase "visibility" of the fair.
"Around
two years back, we realised people would land at the fair mostly during
last days and it too was because they were being told by someone. So we
took notice of this and decided to promote aggressively almost a month
in advance," he said.
"And this is the reason why there hasn't
been any effect on the footfall despite Arvind Kejriwal's swearing-in
ceremony (as Delhi chief minister) and the India-Pakistan match. We
almost crossed 75,000 footfall during the busy weekend," he added.
With
each year, challenge to host a book fair on such a massive scale that
cuts across languages, states and countries and genres like crime,
self-help, mythology, spirituality, religion, poetry, education,
competition books, academics or anything under the sun.
This year, the fair has around 2,100 stalls, 1,100 exhibitors from India and 30 participating countries.
"It
is tough job and the moment this fair will end, we will start working
for the next year. And as said before it is going to be an extravagant
affair," said Samresh, adding around 200 members of the team work
extensively to make this fair a success.