Multicopy tradeshow

Tradeshow throwback

How we long to see you again! Up until 2020, we have always looked forward to January with a special level of excitement. Why? It usually marks the start of Multicopy’s tradeshow-season.

We treasure the opportunity to meet you – our resellers, customers and end-users – and try hard to give you a great, and different, experience in our tradeshow booth each year. Maybe you visited us and got to try the photo booth? Throw paper planes – aiming for a fossil free future? Explore the natural habitat of Multicopy Zero through an AR-experience? Excel in one of our quizzes and get to bring a spruce seedling back home?

To us, being able to enjoy the social interaction while communicating product benefits and presenting sustainable product development, normally is one of the brightest highlights of the year. Normally that is … and we’re not back to normal yet.

But, we will meet again! We hope we can keep our spirits – yours and ours – up by sharing a few of our favorite tradeshow moments from recent times.

Until next time – enjoy and stay safe!

Related news

Workplace consumers at home print less but print better

A survey commissioned by Stora Enso polled 3,400 workplace consumers across Sweden, UK, France, Netherlands, and Germany on office paper purchasing and printing behaviour and delivered a number of new insights including one big surprise for paper makers.

Holiday Greetings with big wishes

All of us at Multicopy would like to thank all of you for reading our articles and keeping in touch with us in one way or another throughout the year. With this video, we want to send you a happy holiday greeting - and a little reminder that no wish is too big. A big thought can lead to many small steps forward.

Papermaking – a brief, vast history

Humans’ urge to communicate has always been strong – and with the evolution of paper, the written form of communicating opened a whole new world of efficiency, suddenly dismantling geographical boundaries. Naturally, the history of papermaking is closely connected to societal, industrial, and cultural events.