eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 

Your Online Guide » Ideas for Marketing » Shows In New York

[E325]Event Planner Trade Show
by Dick Wheeler, Dic
In business as in life, never underestimate the importance of being prepared. As the saying goes, you must first plan your work and then work your plan. This is particularly true in trade show exhibiting where trade show display success is largely dependent on proper planning. Without putting the right plan in place, you will encounter a number of what would be easily avoidable blunders. These oversights can cause havoc on your trade show team's morale as well as your company's bottom line. In order to avoid these errors, however, you must first know what they are.

The five major trade show exhibit mistakes to avoid are:

1. Picking the Wrong Show to Exhibit In
By being distracted by an overly hectic work schedule and being short staffed and overworked, hastily made trade show decisions to exhibit in an upcoming trade show can backfire. Because you were unable to put the proper amount of time in to analyze who would be attending and exhibiting in the trade show, you wound up with the wrong
targeted audience. Without doing the proper research to learn about the qualifications of the trade show attendees and how they match up with your marketing goals, you are subject to missing your target and having an unrewarding trade show experience.

2. Selecting the Wrong Location For your trade show display
If you wait until the last minute to decide on exhibiting in a trade show, you may have to put up with a less than ideal location-- behind a pole, at the end of a dead-end aisle, near loading docks, close to freight doors and ceiling water pipes or in a very dark corner. You may be relegated to a site far from the industry leaders, main attractions, guest services, entrances, exits, escalators, elevators, stairs, windows and seminar sites.

3. Having a vanilla-type trade show booth with no intrigue or style
Just imagine a line forming at the trade show exhibit next to yours where there are compelling, dramatic displays with lots of attractions, audios and interactive activity on their website, sensational giveaways and prizes, fresh brewed coffee and hot buns, dancing acrobats and an oversized TV screen with a luxurious lounge for the foot weary trade show attendee. Then imagine your trade show booth with nothing but a drape. Guess who gets the traffic.

4. Having your trade show booth staff poorly matched with your qualified prospects.
If you are attending a trade show that attracts primarily engineers, your trade show exhibit staff should be comprised of engineers who will be able to communicate with its audience in an informative, intelligent way. It's that simple.

5. Allowing your trade show booth staff to waste time by talking to unqualified prospects. The key is to identify and classify hot prospects and the products and services they are interested in buying. There are new, sophisticated software packages that allow you to identify a half dozen weighted multiple choice questions in advance that will determine how viable a client prospect is. If you do not identify the hot leads and filter out those who are not qualified, then your trade show exhibit staff will only be spinning their wheels. They will spend unproductive time by talking to prospects that do not have the budget, who will be unable to meet a specific time frame and who do not have the ability or authority to purchase your product.

Remember, by avoiding the major pitfalls of novice trade show exhibitors, your trade show display experience will be able to stay on track and you will have a successful trade show exhibiting experience. This applies whether you have a custom trade show exhibit, a custom modular trade show display or a trade show booth rental. It also applies wherever you exhibit'be it the McCormick Convention Center in Chicago, the Kaiser Convention Center in Oakland, the Moscone Center in San Francisco, the Santa Clara Convention Center or the San Jose McEnery Convention Center.

Investing in trade show displays, and attending shows, demands careful planning and consideration of all the issues before you embark on exhibiting or spending your budget. Success relies entirely on prior planning and a great deal of determination and motivation if you are to reap the rewards which millions of exhibitors enjoy from using trade shows. It pays to ask questions before you commit and you will also be able to glean a lot of information to help you with your trade show strategy by carefully looking at the answers you get.

Pricing & Payment

Cost is a key issue because it determines the base yardstick for financial success and your final Return on Investment (ROI is a term you are going to hear a lot about with trade show exhibiting).

Ask about pricing guarantees and undertakings for the display and accessories you are ordering. Will the supplier match price levels you may find elsewhere? What payment options are on offer? Are installments or lease –financing options available? What sales taxes will be levied? On this last note, remember the supplier may not be located where you are at.

Graphics and Creative Questions

The creative input from a trade show partner is essential and will make a huge difference to the overall impact and hence, success, of your trade show attendance. You should not feel shy about asking for opinion and what the supplier's prior experience has been in handling accounts and requirements you are presenting to them – listen to the answers carefully and ask if they have operated for businesses such as yours in the past and if so what worked and what failed.

Many suppliers will work from files sent over the internet but you need to know what formats they will use for artwork and graphical reproduction. Ask them how the different formats will affect the end-quality of the product as well and ensure their technology is capable of rendering hi-quality images and results.

Shipping Questions

After the initial relief at the low prices being quoted to produce the displays and source the accessories you are not yet out of the woods! You have to take into account the shipping costs and more than this, how will they be shipped? There are also the issues concerning the insurance and responsibility for loss or damage during transit, not only when you are initially purchasing the equipment but when you are transporting it to and from trade show locations.

General Questions

Cost is important when it comes to choosing your display and materials but just as important is how easy it is to use and the impact on your team's selling time. How easy is it to set up the display and take it down? Remember if your team has to do this and it takes hours, that cuts into their selling time or if they are not going to be at their very best when it comes to the long day on the trade show floor and you need them firing on all cylinders to attract and close business. If the team is not setting up the display, you're going to be paying for someone else to do it – the longer it takes the greater the cost. Ideally, you are looking for no more than 15 minutes to set up and take down once you have become familiar with the display.

You also should ask how long your display is expected to last. Your display should be adaptable enough to undergo modification and extension so you can maximize the life of the equipment in terms of your own use but also the resale value when it comes time to trade up.

Article Source : Bridal Shows In Florida

About Author
Both Dick Wheeler & Brian Douglass are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Dick Wheeler has sinced written about articles on various topics from Trade Show Exhibit, Trade Shows and Trade Show Exhibit. Dick Wheeler is President of Professional Exhibits & Graphics, headquartered in Sunnyvale, California with showroom in Sacramento. Firm is full-service premiere trade show exhibit, graphics and management services company.. Dick Wheeler's top article generates over 22200 views. to your Favourites.

Brian Douglass has sinced written about articles on various topics from Travel and Leisure, Trade Shows and Stress Management. Brian Douglas is the owner of Trade Show Joe, a leading provider of ,. Brian Douglass's top article generates over 1600 views. to your Favourites.
EditorialToday Ideas for Marketing has 4 sub sections. Such as Branding & Identity, Marketing Strategies, Marketing & Communications and Trade Shows & Conferences. With over 20,000 authors and writers, we are a well known online resource and editorial services site in United Kingdom, Canada & America . Here, we cover all the major topics from self help guide to A Guide to Business, Guide to Finance, Ideas for Marketing, Legal Guide, Lettre De Motivation, Guide to Insurance, Guide to Health, Guide to Medical, Military Service, Guide to Women, Pet Guide, Politics and Policy , Guide to Technology, The Travel Guide, Information on Cars, Entertainment Guide, Family Guide to, Hobbies and Interests, Quality Home Improvement, Arts & Humanities and many more.
About Editorial Today | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Submit an Article | Our Authors