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Trade shows have evolved from being a place to
create awareness of new products and services to an arena of intense
selling activity. There are many elements to consider but the 3
phases you must consider are Pre-Show, During the Show, and After
the Show. Below are tips to help you through each of these phases
Trade Shows can be a powerful marketing tool,
but like all marketing efforts they take careful thought, input
from many areas, intelligent planning and smooth implementation.
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Pre-Show
Planning Checklist:
Evaluate (Is this the best trade show for our
objectives & the cost?)
Exhibit (Are you creating a new one or using an existing one?.)
Booth size (Have adequate space for showing, talking & closing.)
Booth location (Look to be where there is heavy traffic, near entrances/exits/restrooms
food areas.)
Booth transportation (Be sure it gets delivered in time.)
Booth set-up (Who is responsible? Set time schedule.)
Booth Communications (Are you going to need phones, faxes, electrical outlets
for computers, etc.?)
Hotel rooms (If you are going to do business there make sure you have adequate
space and good room service. Try to stay at the show’s headquarter hotel.)
Transportation (Advanced planning can save substantial money.)
Pre-show promotion (Let prospects and customers know you are there and
where.)
Show incentives (Motivate show traffic to stop in your booth.)
Lead collection system (Makes it easier to follow through.)
Training for exhibit staff
VIP appointment scheduling plan
Collateral materials (for handouts)
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Know
Who Is Going To Be There:
-You want to know what customers and key prospects
are going to be there, so you can take appropriate action to maximize
your exposure to them.
- You want to know what competition is going to be there, so you can take counter
measures to dilute their marketing effectiveness and to be on your
toes to any competitive efforts they take. A trade show is also an
excellent place to gather competitive intelligence.
- You want a sense of how many people will be attending,
so you can try to project the amount of sales or lead generation
activity to expect.
- The organization running the trade show will usually
have a list of pre-registered attendees and other exhibitors available
at least 60 days prior to the show. Ask for it!
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Work
The 80/20 Rule:
Most businesses get 80% of their business from 20%
of their customer base. Thus you want to insure that your 20% visit
your booth. You could do any or all of the following.
- Send a personal note to them requesting them
to stop by.
- Find out at what hotel they are staying and
have a note delivered to their attention.
- Offer an incentive for them to visit - a little
gift or a chance to win a prize.
- Offer a private appointment time to insure they
will get the attention they deserve.
Remember it costs 5 times as much to gain a new customer
as it does to keep the ones you have, so pamper them every chance
you can.
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Outthinking
The (Larger) Competition:
Your competitor might have more money to spend on
an exhibit, but they don’t have a monopoly on good ideas.
-Try strong visuals to attract attention, perhaps
a mural attached by Velcro to your booth’s back wall. Many of the
manufacturers of lightweight material can supply you or guide you
to ways to have a dramatic look at minimal cost.
- Have a “look” for your booth personnel. A nice blazer
with a corporate emblem or distinctive windbreaker or even a well-designed
sweatshirt and cap can be effective (have extras of the latter available,
clients might want one to wear).
- A hospitality suite, without booze (or just wine)
as a place customers and key prospects are welcome to relax throughout
the day can be very appealing and effective in building relationships.
- Have a customer survey disk that people can fill
out on their computers (or at your booth) which will have a little
incentive gift sent as thanks.
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Getting
The Prospect’s Attention:
Don’t wait until the show, promote Pre-show! Have
your sales people identify 5-10 highly qualified prospects each that
they know are going to attend the show. Create a 3-dimensional mailing
piece (like a coffee cup with their name on it, a packet of coffee,
or some cookies with your logo) and invite them to sit down over
a cup of coffee at your booth. Oh, yes don’t fail to mention if they
do, you’ll send them another personalized mug as a thank you! You
might want to consider asking them to RSVP and then have ready a
sign welcoming them.
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Follow
Through & Follow-up:
- Be sure all booth personnel are trained in demonstrating,
presenting, skilled in asking the right questions, experts in listening
and writing down the information requested (make sure there are intelligently
designed inquiry/action forms available).
- Each evening be sure all leads are reviewed, actions
planned and sent by overnight mail to the office for follow through.
- Each day of the show have a prepackaged “thank you
for visiting our booth” letter ready to be mailed out to each lead
from the trade show. Include in it a small promotional specialty
with your company name on it.
- Invest in a reasonably priced lead tracking software package to insure that
all leads are followed up within 2 weeks or less and then continually
monitored until it is decided that no additional effort is necessary.
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After
The Show -- EVALUATE:
While everything is fresh in your mind, ask what can
be done to improve future shows.
List what went well and should be repeated. Identify
what was poorly received or implemented and either improve or eliminate.
Call some customers who visited your booth and give
them an opportunity to critique your effort on the basis you want
to improve your service to your customers. They will love the opportunity
to give you advice and it will probably be valuable.
Review your follow-through and follow-up on show leads
efforts as they are the areas that generate the revenue and are usually
the ones most neglected.
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" Common
sense is the knack of seeing things as they are, and doing things
as they ought to be done"
- Harriet Beecher Stowe
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