Archive for the 'Trade Show Displays' Category

5 Top Tips to Recession Proof your Business?

No-one likes the “R” word but there is no getting away from it; business is very hard right now as financial markets collapse, the Wall Street credit woes have hit Main Street and everyone is looking for ways to save money, make more and keep their bottom line intact.

The big question is how we keep our businesses safe and go forward through to the recovery that will inevitably follow?

Take a look at these business tips for recession proofing your company.

Tip #1 – See the people!

One seasoned salesman explained that there are only three rules to selling:

  1. See the people;
  2. See the people; and
  3. See the People!!!!!!!!!!

You get the point I’m sure; sending out your message again and again is not business spamming, it is a good business sense. On average it takes someone at least a dozen instances of your name or message being put before them before it reaches high level consciousness. Take every opportunity to get you name and message before people you do business with or intend doing business with; there is no mileage in hiding your light under a bush here so get the blow horn out and start spreading the word.

Regular mailings, emails, newsletters, marketing and promotional campaigns, business events, networking, trade shows and seminars, sponsorship, press releases, business awards, public service…whatever it takes to get yourself known and kept in the mind’s eye of your business community and customer base is essential.

Never stop broadcasting what you do and who you are.

Tip #2 – Free Trials

This was picked up in at a sales seminar for a car dealer in Continue reading ‘5 Top Tips to Recession Proof your Business?’

Trade Show Icebreakers – How to Say Hello to a Stranger

Picture the scene; you’re in your booth, a prospect is scanning your presentation and stops for a moment on the way to somewhere else for a briefest pause.

You have a second to stop them turning away and moving on.

What do you do?

Too late!

They left.

Anyone thinking they just weren’t that interested in the booth and so disqualified themselves from any further sales and marketing attention can simply stop reading here.

Successful trade shows are busy and packed with attendees and exhibitors looking to do business. As an exhibitor, you’ll find business where you least expect it, so it’s a mistaken presumption to think our rushed attendee above was not interested in what we have to offer. Attendees are also booked up for meetings on the day as well as being overwhelmed with competing exhibitors vying for their attention and limited time available.

It’s frequently difficult to break the ice and make that approach to entice a prospect into meaningful dialogue and so lead the conversation around to talking business where you can really qualify your prospect. With this in mind, here are some handy hints and one-liners to make initial contact and draw your prospect in.

At #1 – Big Smile and a Big Hello

It’s as simple as a smile and genuine greeting. Combining a smile with a greeting makes it almost impossible for a prospect to ignore you because it is a hard wired human reaction to smile and return the greeting back.

For experienced exhibitors and sales people, Continue reading ‘Trade Show Icebreakers – How to Say Hello to a Stranger’

90% of the Marketing Work Goes in Before the Show, Right?


WRONG!!

Many people think that marketing work is mostly done before you even get to the trade show but we’re going to take a look at this popular misconception and take a good, hard look at this commercial myth.

Before we get into the detail, think about this.

Remember the Kentucky Derby and the Big Brown fiasco with the Triple Crown at stake? This wonder horse was all set for a rare and historic horse racing triumph and there was a great deal of pre-race hype about how this huge, very strong horse was just going to push its way through to victory.

In any event Big Brown came home a long way at the back of the pack but it would not have mattered if he had romped home in second place and lost by a nose.

All that pre-race preparation and hype was just that – preparation.

Marketing has one essential criterion for being successful and that is summed up simply as PERFORMANCE ON THE DAY!

Sure, being prepared is essential and you definitely need to plan carefully, but no matter how much support you have got on the day you have got to deliver the goods.

When you open at a trade show, you will be presenting your company and yourself to the world and many attendees may already know you, your products and your company but there will always be a host of new prospects to turn into customers too. You should never presume that old customers are going to remain loyal either; do not take them for granted.

What you do on exhibition and trade show days is more important to your success than all of the effort that has gone into preparation and planning; a signature on a new contract or repeat order is the prize for performance on the day.

Here are some simple tips for helping you achieve winning performance on the day.

Prospects and Customers Like to Touch Stuff

It doesn’t matter if you are the CEO or a big or little kid – people like to play with stuff.

It’s part of human nature to want to know how things work, so use scale models and mock-ups to let them look at and dismantle so they can see how a thing works. Continue reading ‘90% of the Marketing Work Goes in Before the Show, Right?’

Top 10 Tips for Maximizing Trade Show Potential on a Budget

If your name is Bill Gates and you work for Microsoft, you don’t need to read this. If you use trade shows to reach out to new and old customers, working on a budget and want to make the most out of the opportunity for doing business, then this is definitely for you so read on.

Every day, trade shows across the country help generate millions of dollars for businesses, most of them are not the large companies with an established product line but the small and medium sized businesses where putting up the cost of exhibiting can be prohibitive.

You need to make every buck count and you’re going to be surprised at how much of your trade show success will depend on what you do instead of how much you spend!

Top Tip #1

If you are relatively new to using trade shows, rent the smallest trade show display that is practical and consider this to be a learning experience while keeping costs down as you work out what works for you and what does not for future use.

Top Tip #2

When you dress for the show, look to dress up slightly better than the attendees. You are aiming to appear professional but not aloof and unapproachable.

Top Tip #3

Pay a visit to a trade show before you plan your own exhibition. This will give you a feel for developing your own trade show presence and there is nothing stopping you from networking as an attendee.

Top Tip #4

Think about teaming up with a non-competing business to share costs and booth space. This will help you both in terms of sharing costs and the synergy created when it comes to advertising and referrals; a recommendation from another business to potential customers is far more valuable than an advert in the press. An example would be, you are sell roofing products so consider teaming up with a window manufacturer and cross sell to your potential customers.

Top Tip #5

As you develop experience with trade shows, you should think about keeping your presentations and booth fresh and interesting both for new and old customers. Look at featuring new products for your existing customers and if this isn’t possible, demonstrate product upgrades and showcasing new applications while keeping your marketing materials updated. Get everyone at the office in on this as brainstorming is a great way to get creative without spending a lot of money.

Top Tip #6

If you attend a show as an attendee, take a look at how many business cards you collect during the course of the day; a lot! Now think about each of those people who gave you a card and the odds are you cannot remember who was offering what – you need something on your business cards to make sure the people you give your card out to do not experience the same amnesia.

Put a picture of your leading product onto your business cards and use the same picture as part of your booth presentation. This will make it easier for attendees to recall why they took your card and what you are selling when they get back home to base with dozens of other business cards.

Top Tip #7

Don’t forget the basics of sales and marketing; there are three simple rules to follow – See the People, See the People and See the People!

Make sure you tell customers and prospects you will be at the trade show, what your booth number is, the location address and in your pre-show materials, provide a discount or other promotional offer for coming by your booth.

Use your website to list upcoming events you are exhibiting at as well as giving the information you mail out, but make sure you remove reference to an event after it has closed or your website will look out of date.

Top Tip #8

When you plan your booth display, make it open and inviting with coffee and refreshments on the side or at the rear but visible and don’t put a desk or table across the open entrance to the booth and sit behind it – this looks intimidating for people to approach you and will also make those who do come in feel trapped. Use your space wisely to draw potential customers in make them feel relaxed in a business like setting.

Do not sit down! If you can’t stand on your feet all day, use a high stool and not a low chair. The reason being is that attendees are put off by people in booths rising up from a seat to meet them so it is better to be already on your feet so make sure you wear comfortable shoes too!

Top Tip #9

Make sure you have the right identification and documents to let you into the exhibition hall!

Sounds simple and logical but you will be surprised at how many attendees and exhibitors fail to have the right paperwork to gain admittance.

Top Tip #10

Before you plan an exhibition booth, sit down with your team and do the basics first. Identify your potential customers and target markets; identify what their needs and requirements are; come up with tangible and quantifiable objectives and then plan your booth to meet those targets.

With this in mind, make sure you plan your booth so it is uncluttered and a potential customer can focus clearly on what you are offering immediately – remember there will be hundreds of other booths competing for attention so don’t make attendees work to figure yours out.

Working with trade shows and exhibitions can be tiring and fraught with stress in getting everything planned and executed but this is where something is also lost; the main opportunity a trade show presents is to get to know new customers and strengthen the relationship with existing ones and that happens when you have fun!

You can maximize the fun factor by making sure you plan and prepare everything beforehand so consider your exhibition presence very carefully.

Yes, there is a serious aspect to doing business, but trade shows are relaxed and informal and are an opportunity to let your own corporate and individual personalities shine through so feel free to experiment with your trade show approach and find out what works for you.

Building a buzz at a trade show with a limited budget

Trying to do something noteworthy at your latest trade show but your budget doesn’t support it? Here is a case study supplied by Marketing Sherpas to get you started.

Do you yearn to dominate your industry’s biggest trade show, but just don’t have the budget for a giant booth or flashy party? You’re going to love this Case Study… Hear how a trade organization with a “meager booth” got mega-attention from both press and attendees at CES by flooding the show floor with 300-identically dressed models, carefully scripted to murmur one word under their breath. Includes lots of useful details on logistics, plus links to photos and resources:

CHALLENGE
“We couldn’t afford a big trade show display, we just couldn’t,” says Eric Schneider Marketing Manager Bluetooth Special Interest Group. “We’re a trade association operating on a modest budget.”

This January 192,000 mass retailers and technology engineers and developers, attended the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. There were so many booths that the entire Convention Center was filled, plus there were overflow booths located in tents pitched outside and in the halls of the nearby Hilton.

The hundreds of exhibitors included heavy-hitters such as Microsoft, Sony, Dell, Verizon, Intel, and HP. “I’d heard tall tales about CES,” says Schneider, “but everything was bigger and more outrageous than I could have ever imaged. Some companies put millions of dollars into their booths.”

Despite the fact that Bluetooth’s floor space was “meager,” Schneider’s goal was get buzz throughout the show.

Over the previous 12 months, Bluetooth’s technology had reached critical mass in terms of 3,000 manufacturers incorporating it in their products. But, the brand was hardly known by the outside world — especially amongst retailers.

CES was the perfect platform to launch the brand to the rest of the consumer electronics world … if Bluetooth could get anyone to pay attention.

CAMPAIGN

Schneider and his agency turned to a scene in the 1999 film ‘The Thomas Crown Affair’ for inspiration — where an art thief distracts police attention by flooding a large museum with dozens of look-alike bowler hat-wearing businessmen.

If Bluetooth could fill the Convention Center with hundreds of identical models in matching outfits, it could make a similar impression. In effect the entire show floor would become Bluetooth’s booth.

The logistics team for the campaign codenamed ‘Operation Blueshock’ swung into action right after Labor Day. There were seven major steps:

Step #1. Getting permission

If you’re planning to do anything unusual at a trade show, first you must get permission from show organizers. The Blueshock team didn’t want to lessen their impact by spoiling the surprise, so they described the campaign very broadly to show organizers. “Can we have a couple of 100 employees give out cards at the show?”

They also contacted about 20 different staffers at the Convention Center itself to make sure that every level of security and management were ok with them flooding entryways with several hundred models en masse.

Step #2. On-site visit

Although they had been planning from show floor maps, the team invested in an on-site visit to spec out the situation in reality. So in November, they flew in to attend COMDEX (another big show in the same space.)

They paid extra attention to how traffic used various entrances, noting which were likely to become clogged and which were fairly open. Even though Convention Center security management were on board with the campaign, the team knew that news might not trickle down to every single security guard at the show itself.

They didn’t want the fate of the entire campaign to rest in the hands of a guard who might slow or stop the models from entering the floor en masse. So, they decided split the models into large teams and to use several different entrances at once.

Step #3. Costuming

Obviously it was critical that the models stand out from the attendees. “We didn’t want to do a typical booth babe,” says Schneider. “People who go to CES tend to dress down, so we decided to stand out with formal wear.”

Formal wear as in black tuxedos with blue pocket handkerchiefs for the male models and classic black cocktail dresses with blue clutch bags for the women. The women’s hair was pulled back, and both sexes wore matching wrap-around sunglasses to help them maintain composure and avoid eye contact as they marched through the hall.

“In contrast to smiling booth staffers, our models were serious, almost robotic. They stood out, they were on an important mission. It was very Matrix-like in a lot of ways.”

Where do you get 150-matching tuxedos? The team called dozens of sources months before the show and finally ended up shipping them in from Texas. The 150-matching dresses for the female models also came from Texas, in this case a bridal retailer was able to help out.

Note: While women’s dresses were fairly easy to fit — they only come in a limited number of sizes and bridal-outfitters always leave extra cloth for alterations — tuxedos have “about five different moving parts” so getting the right size for each model can be very difficult.

Step #4. Hiring models

Hiring 300 models for a show in Vegas was also a challenge. Eight of the ten agencies the team called said it would be close to impossible. The team checked the references of the two agencies that showed no hesitation, and picked the best. (Link below.)

As each model was hired, the agency made them sign an NDA (non-disclosure agreement) so they wouldn’t tell anyone about the campaign beforehand. Plus the agency identified the most responsible professionals as potential team leaders for the groups as they walked the show floor.

The agency also carefully measured models for outfits. This was critical because when you call in “blind” orders for formal wear (orders for which the tailor has not met the wearer), there’s usually an average 70% failure rate. With the agency’s help, this campaign only had a 30% failure rate, and the majority of problems were relatively minor.

Read the entire article an Marketing Sherpas.

Choosing the Right Tradeshow(s)

Let’s face it, everybody has exhibited at a trade show and at the end of the show said, “I’ll never do this show again”. With the proliferation of trade shows these days, which show do you choose? Well, first of all you don’t just choose one show and let that be your agenda for the year; you plan your schedule strategically. I would suggest, depending on your industry, let’s take manufacturing for example, you choose no fewer than two shows per year and more, if warranted (more on that in a minute). Two shows, one in the spring and one in the fall, allows your organization the benefit from any sales cycles that may exist. More to the point it allows your sales force to interface with prospects and suspects, not to mention customers, which may only get perfunctory attention during the rest of the year. And, it provides excellent momentum for introduction of new products and services. More than two shows? Absolutely, if your organization has opportunities in sectors of large market categories.

But which shows? Here are some suggestions to consider: If the show is National, where can your space be positioned and what is the trend in exhibitors? Can your space be positioned near the entrance or are you going to relegated to some obscure space in the back of the hall? When the call to entry comes in, are the same number of exhibitors signed up this year as last OR is it negative gain? Is the show manager, your industry association? And, if so, are they offering symposia on meaningful industry issues (or maybe no round tables or topics at all)? If so, can your sales manager be a speaker or at least on a round table discussion panel? If not, chances are your customers will feel the same and skip the show. I would poll your ten top customers and ask what show(s) they attend. And, if there are several new prospects or suspects that have high potential, ask them as well. A blinding glimpse of the obvious? Probably. Good marketing? You bet.

What if the shows your organization is considering are simply Regional or Local in scope? I would call the show manager and ask about attendance over the last several years. If it’s up or steady; it’s definitely worth considering. If not, what’s the point?

If it’s Regional, I would definitely ask the same set of questions but I would look for the participation of my competition as well. If your competition is there, you may be conspicuous by your absence. If not, it may be a golden opportunity, especially if the attendance is up from one year to the next. If your competition has been there but not recently, you may want to ask some more questions and see if the right set of prospects and suspects fits your goals.

If it’s Local, I would definitely check the venue. If the venue is a hotel or motel, it may be OK but only if you are offered adequate space (definitely not a hallway). If it’s a convention center or exhibition hall, definitely worth considering – the venue is right around the corner and you can rotate manning the booth throughout the show so it’s convenient for everybody.

Remember, NO MATTER WHAT THE SHOW, the organization that ends up with the most visitors to its space is the organization that wins.


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