ISPO Munich, Europe’s leading outdoor sport and equipment trade show, is reinventing itself by adopting a revised layout and a new schedule. The goal is to adapt to the industry’s needs, in order to preserve its status as one of the top trade shows in Europe. ISPO will still be held at the Messe München Trade Fair Centre, in the eastern part of Munich, Germany.
ISPO MUNICH
ISPO Munich is changing its calendar by starting on a Sunday ISPO MUNICH
ISPO Munich’s 2025 edition will welcome visitors and exhibitors from November 30 to December 2. The show was previously held mid-week, but will now start on a Sunday, a decision taken to better cater to small businesses. “Choice of dates is a crucial factor for a trade show’s success. In our opinion, tweaking the show’s schedule is a clear signal that ISPO is responding to industry needs. [Opening the event on] Sunday gives smaller retailers greater flexibility, making it easier for them to attend the show,” said Margit Gosau and Dominik Solleder, CEOs of Sport 2000 International.
Facilitating knowledge transfer
While the Outdoor show will not be held in 2025 due to a lack of participants, ISPO Munich is also relying on a new exhibition layout to generate fresh momentum. The event’s sections will be split up among three thematic areas. The ‘Brands and Products’ area brings together exhibitors showcasing innovative products belonging to various categories. Brands specialising in the lifestyle segment, featuring the more creative side of directional outdoor products that capture the contemporary zeitgeist, will exhibit in Hall A1. Hall A2 is dedicated to functional innovations and sustainable solutions by outdoor brands, and Hall A3 will showcase the latest racket sport trends. Still within the ‘Brands and Products’ area, Hall B2 will present indoor and outdoor fitness solutions, and will be the venue of the ISPO Award, in the Training and Performance section. The area’s final section, Health and Wellness in Hall B1, is a novelty, highlighting the growing importance of the connection between sport and well-being.
The new layout of the ISPO Munich show
Hall B1 will also host the ISPO Brandnew section, presenting innovative sport industry start-ups as part of the second thematic area, ‘Commerce and Experience’. The latter will also include two conference areas, which have been set up closer to the show via the redesigned west entrance. The idea is to make networking and the transfer of knowledge and new ideas an integral part of the show’s activity. “We want to facilitate interaction right where industry professionals are meeting, at the heart of the show,” said Saskia Rettenbacher, head of event management at ISPO. Among the events planned during the show are the international Sport Brand Media conference (formerly Sport.Marke.Medien), the educational forum for professional sports trainers, and Sports Tech Nation. Details of other scheduled conferences are being finalised.
Sport influencers, ISPO Munich’s new communication tool
The third and final thematic area, ‘Upstream and Supply’, will be the venue for promoting sustainable materials and innovative manufacturing methods. Procurement specialists, designers and product development specialists will be able to find new solutions and technologies for avant-garde sporting products in this area. The ISPO Textrends Award for ground-breaking textiles (in Hall B3) completes the event’s focus on sustainable solutions, while the Supply Chain Forum (in Hall C4) will showcase best practices for resilient supply chains.
ISPO Munich will benefit from the cancellation of the Outdoor trade show’s 2025 edition – ISPO Munich/Thomas Plettenberg
In addition to introducing a new exhibition layout, ISPO Munich intends to boost its visibility by staging the International Sports Influencer Summit. Professional influencers invited to the show will be covering the event on social media. To make the new format even more effective, ISPO is introducing a new digital networking tool, facilitating the creation of ad hoc networks and exploiting the show’s commercial potential before, during and after the event.
ISPO Munich’s previous edition, focused on the circular economy and sustainability, featured 2,300 exhibitors and attracted 55,000 visitors.
Eyewear specialist InSpecs has released its preliminary results for 2024 and while its profit margin rose, revenue, underlying EBITDA and cash flows from operating activities all fell.
InSpecs
The company, which makes and markets its own brands as well as operating licenses for Barbour, Joseph, Radley, Superdry, Temperley and Viktor&Rolf, among others, said group revenue fell to £198.3 million from £203.3 million. At constant currency though it was only down to £203.2 million.
The gross profit margin rose to 52.2% from 50.9% but underlying EBITDA fell to £17.6 million from £18 million. Operating profit actually managed to rise to £3.4 million from £2.9 million but cash flows from operating activities were down to £14.2 million from £16.9 million. However, the company’s net debt excluding leasing was reduced to £22.9 million from £24.2 million.
The year saw a number of achievements including distribution agreed for key new brands in leading retailers across the US, Canada and Europe; completion of the group’s new state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in Vietnam; the integration of the US businesses; group centralised procurement generating supply chain efficiencies; the launch of a new optics product ‘Optaro’, being a video magnifier specifically made for smartphones; and new finance facilities put in place until 2027 with improved terms.
The company also responded to the current tariff situation and doesn’t seem excessively worried.
Its non-US based businesses aren’t currently affected by the recent changes in tariffs, and the group is “confident that the continuing focus on supply chain efficiencies, reducing operational expenditure and selective pass through of cost increases to preserve margins across key markets will largely mitigate the effects of these new tariffs”.
The company also set out its medium-term ambition to deliver CAGR organic revenue growth 40% above the market rate, which is currently forecast to grow at 3% CAGR over the next five years, as well as double-digit underlying EBITDA.
CEO Richard Peck said the firm “demonstrated resilience in 2024 despite challenging macroeconomic conditions, with revenue declining by 2.5% due to softer consumer demand and competitor consolidation. However, our continued focus throughout the year on the integration and simplification of our business has been significant.
“The first quarter has laid the groundwork for a pivotal year and as we move forward, the focus remains on sharpening efficiency, streamlining operations, and advancing key initiatives. Notwithstanding the recently announced tariffs and caution in relation to market conditions, compelling new projects in the pipeline give us confidence in delivering on market expectations for 2025.”
Fashion Revolution, which says it’s the world’s largest fashion activism movement, has announced details for Fashion Revolution Week 2025 that runs from 22-27 April.
Photo: Pixabay
The theme this year is Think Globally, Act Locally as it aims to engage local communities and policy-makers.
It’san undeniably big aim and comes “as governments worldwide backslide on legislation aimed at protecting the environment and garment workers’ rights, global brands are also silently deprioritising their sustainability goals and fossil fuel divestment, highlighting why collective citizen action matters now more than ever”.
Fashion Revolution Week 2025 will mobilise citizens through its network in over 80 countries and beyond, “to come together, raise awareness, upskill themselves, and advocate for improved social and environmental legislation, amplifying the message that fashion brands need to be held accountable for their impacts and increase transparency throughout their supply chains”.
Executive director Sarah Jay said: “As we usher Fashion Revolution into its second decade, we must build upon the spirit of allyship, inquiry, and community in which we were founded. Fash Rev’s inaugural question, ‘Who made my clothes?’ is as relevant now as ever. We must continue to ask bold questions, and demand transparency, solid commitments, and tangible action plans from brands, stakeholders, and policymakers. We must organise locally, connect strategically, and make our voices heard in support of greater legislative protections for the global fashion workforce, for biodiversity, and for the ecosystem services we continue to exploit through overproduction and consumption.”
The group has a Local Issues Toolkit that can be downloaded. It contains an overview of industry issues, as well as resources to help hone in on what’s most relevant to those taking part and their immediate community.
It’s advising on how to engage local policy-makers and there’s a Mend in Public Day planned for 26 April. This follows a successful launch in 2024. “Armed with needle and thread, Fashion Revolutionaries will be mending and stitching in protest of overproduction and consumption. Because in an age of throwaway fashion, repairing our clothes is a revolutionary act. Take the opportunity to join your local community, repair torn pockets and ripped seams and spark conversations on how to make Loved Clothes Last,” Fashion Revolution said.
Together with Slow Stitch Club, it’s also hosting an Online Darning Workshop on 26 April.
Burberry has taken an unusual approach for its High Summer campaign with a slightly less polished approach than usual.
It feel like a series of holiday snaps captured on 35mm film, but as usual with the brand, it’s a very British feel.
Featuring British model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley and British tennis player Jack Draper, alongside models Alva Claire and Babacar N’Doye, “plus a few unmissable extras”, there’s a focus on size and age diversity.
The camera pans from sun loungers to yacht deck, ice lollies to lilos. There’s “even a random scuba diver” with the company’s tongue-in-cheek response to this being that it “can neither confirm nor deny rumours that the ‘random scuba diver’ is, in fact, the Burberry Knight”.
It’s all what creative chief Daniel Lee calls a “Burberry celluloid postcard – an arc of British idiosyncrasies and humour, with factor 50 on”.
He also said it was inspired by various “incredible yachting and holiday images” he found in the archive.
The campaign also includes a series of special events and hotel takeovers at surprise locations (actually The Newt in Somerset, England and The Standard on Ibiza in Spain) and the film celebrating the new High Summer capsule collection.
The film’s British feel is underscored with the ‘Shipping Forecast’ theme tune and the company said it “sits in charming contrast to its soundtrack. A ‘wish you were here?’ of sorts: two weeks away in the sun, but back home it’s raining”.
The cast wears the High Summer collection: a mix of check swimwear and shirt dresses. Nautical motifs, like knots fashioned into logos and sailboats, decorate silk dresses, shirts and shorts, worn with slides or espadrilles. Bags this summer are crochet-knit or woven into jacquards.
Lee said “we wanted to capture the joy of the British at play. A kind of kick-start to the summer. Burberry is a brand for all the seasons, don’t forget.”